Defending Iditarod Champ Bolts Nulato
From the Associated Press
Defending Iditarod Champ Bolts Nulato
By RACHEL D’ORO
NULATO, Alaska (AP) — Defending champion Lance Mackey was the first musher out of this Yukon River checkpoint Saturday in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, leaving with a team he said was not running at full-throttle.
“I’m not sure they’re going to have what it takes,” Mackey said of his 14-dog team before leaving Nulato at 2:49 p.m. to head to Kaltag 42 miles downriver. “But I’m not giving up. A lot can happen between now and Nome.”
The 37-year-old Fairbanks musher also was the first to reach this old Russian trading post, 700 miles into the 1,100-mile race to Nome. He arrived with 14 dogs exactly two hours ahead of four-time champion Jeff King, whose 16 dogs looked alert and fresh despite the long trek on the Yukon.
Mackey said his own dogs were finally responding to medicine for lingering diarrhea that’s affected their appetites. His team, which thrives in subzero weather, also has struggled with inertia brought on by unseasonably warm conditions along the trail.
Using many of the same dogs, Mackey last year became the first musher to sweep the 1,100-mile Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race and the Iditarod. He also won the Yukon Quest last month with many of the same dogs that are running in this Iditarod.
“I think Jeff is traveling a little faster right now,” Mackey said in Nulato, fretting that King’s dogs will take over the lead. “I’m going to do everything I can to keep that from happening. But in all honesty, I think he’s in control.”
Before heading off to the village school for a nap, the 51-year-old King tended to his team, throwing the dogs a pre-meal snack of frozen meat.
“Here you go,” he said as he scattered straw on the snow. “That what you looking for?”
Asked if he planned to take all 16 dogs back on the trail with him, King said, “I believe so. They’re all fine.”
And sure enough, when King left Nulato at 4:32 p.m., his entire team went with him.
Rookie musher John Stetson of Duluth, Minn., scratched Saturday in Cripple following the early morning death of a 7-year-old male dog on his team. Stetson, who was 61st in the standings, cited the death of Zaster as well as concerns over sick dogs as his reasons for scratching.
Stetson left Zaster with officials at the Ophir checkpoint at 2 a.m. on Friday. The dog had been showing signs of pneumonia. A necropsy determined aspiration pneumonia as the likely cause of death, according to race officials, who said more tests will be conducted.
Also arriving in Nulato hours behind the two front-runners were 2004 winner Mitch Seavey of Seward; last year’s Iditarod runner-up, Paul Gebhardt of Kasilof; Rick Swenson of Two Rivers — the Iditarod’s only five-time winner; three-time Yukon Quest winner Hans Gatt of Whitehorse, Yukon; Kjetil Backen of Porsbrunn, Norway; and veteran John Baker of Kotzebue.
Gebhardt, who arrived in Nulato just as Mackey was taking off, carried the ashes of his old leader, a 4-year-old male named Governor who bled to death in November after eating a rock, which ruptured his intestines. Gebhardt, 51, scattered the dog’s ashes Saturday along the river at Bishop Rock, halfway between Ruby and Kaltag.
“He was always a really, really good runner along the river,” he said. “It’s kind of like I freed his spirit.”
Earlier in the race, Gebhardt lost crucial time after becoming disoriented near the Cripple checkpoint. He still managed to be fourth into Nulato, but pointed out that he was taking his eight-hour rest here, which meant he would lose that standing soon enough.
“I wanted to win, but I’ve already screwed that up,” he said. “I’ve reset my goal to at least finish in the top 10.”
About a dozen other mushers were heading to Nulato as of Saturday evening after leaving the Galena checkpoint, including four-time winner Martin Buser of Big Lake and Yukon Quest runner-up Ken Anderson of Fairbanks.
Eight mushers have scratched since the start of the race and one has been withdrawn. A field of 87 mushers remain on the trail.
In its 36th running, the Iditarod commemorates a run by sled dogs in 1925 to deliver lifesaving diphtheria serum to Nome.
The modern-day Iditarod trail crosses frozen rivers, dense woods and two mountain ranges, then goes along the dangerous sea ice up the Bering Sea shore. Along the way, mushers can encounter blinding snow storms and temperatures far below zero.
Mushers are competing for a piece of an $875,000 purse, to be paid out among the top 30 finishers to reach Nome. The winner gets $69,000 and a new truck worth $45,000.
The front-runners take about 10 days to make the trek, so the winner could cross the finish line under Nome’s burled arch by Tuesday.










