The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dog illness prompts former Iditarod champ to scratch from race

- Mark Thiessen, Associated Press

One of four former champions in this year’s Iditarod quit the race Saturday, saying it was in the best interest of his dog team, which had picked up an illness.

Pete Kaiser, who in 2019 became the fifth Alaska Native and first Yupik musher to win the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, scratched at the McGrath checkpoint. He had 10 dogs in harness after starting the race with 14 on his team.

Kaiser’s dogs picked up a bug earlier in the race, and by the time they reached McGrath, they were not doing well. The Bethel musher said he could have completed the race but didn’t consider his team to be competitiv­e, the Anchorage Daily News reported.

The pandemic didn’t stop the world’s most famous sled dog race from starting March 7 with 46 mushers. During the race, mushers have bypassed most rural Alaska villages that normally serve as checkpoint­s as a safety precaution, leaving the competitor­s to sleep in tent camps outside towns or under the stars in temperatur­es that have reached minus 55 degrees. Since then, seven have scratched, including fan favorite Aliy Zirkle, who was injured in a fall. Another musher, Gunnar Johnson, was withdrawn after he tested for positive for COVID-19.

That leaves 38 teams on the trail. Aaron Burmeister, a native of Nome, was the first musher to leave the checkpoint at Nikolai, about 247 miles from the finish. Former four-time champion Dallas Seavey was running in third place, and Joar Leifseth Ulsom of Norway, the 2018 champion, was two spots back of Seavey. Another four-time champion, Martin Buser, was in 26th place.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States