Current:Home > FinanceDallas Seavey wins 6th Iditarod championship, most ever in the world’s most famous sled dog race -Stellar Wealth Sphere
Dallas Seavey wins 6th Iditarod championship, most ever in the world’s most famous sled dog race
View
Date:2025-04-16 21:37:50
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Dallas Seavey overcame killing a moose and receiving a time penalty to win the Iditarod on Tuesday, a record-breaking sixth championship in the world’s most famous sled dog race.
Seavey drove his team a half-block off the Bering Sea ice onto the frozen streets of Nome to cross under the famed burled arch finish line, a triumphant moment in a race marred by the death of three sled dogs, including two on Sunday, and serious injury to another.
The deaths prompted one animal rights organization to renew its call for the end of the storied endurance race in which a team of dogs pulls a sled across 1,000 miles (1,609-kilometers) of Alaska wilderness.
Seavey, 37, becomes the winningest musher in the 51-year history of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, which takes the teams over two mountain ranges, across the Yukon River and along the frozen edges of the Bering Sea just south of the Arctic Circle.
Fans poured out of bars lining Front Street to cheer Seavey, whose team was escorted by a police car with flashing lights. A former mayor once compared the atmosphere in Nome for the Iditarod finish to that of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, but with dogs.
Such a momentous win started out rough for Seavey after his team got tangled up with a moose on the trail just hours after the Iditarod started.
Seavey’s dog Faloo was injured before Seavey shot and killed the moose with a handgun. Race rules require any big game animal killed in defense of life or property to be gutted before the musher moves on.
Seavey told officials he gutted the moose the best he could. However, he was ultimately given a two-hour time penalty because he only spent 10 minutes gutting the moose, officials said.
The time penalty did not cost Seavey the race, and he left the second-to-last checkpoint Tuesday morning with a healthy three-hour lead over his nearest competitor.
Seavey’s name is found throughout the Iditarod record book. In 2005, he became the youngest musher to run in the race, and in 2012, its youngest champion.
Seavey also won Iditarod championships in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2021. He had previously been tied with now-retired musher Rick Swenson with five titles apiece. Swenson won the Iditarod in 1977, 1979, 1981, 1982 and 1991.
Seavey’s family history is deeply entwined with the Iditarod. His grandfather, Dan Seavey, helped organize and ran the first Iditarod in 1973, and his father, Mitch Seavey, is a three-time champion.
Dallas Seavey almost took a different path in the sports world. He was the first Alaskan to win a USA national wrestling championship when he took the 125-pound Gregco-Roman title in 2003 and trained for a year at the U.S. Olympic Training Center before concussions led him to back to mushing.
Besides the moose encounter and time penalty, the race had other controversial issues this year.
After going five years without a dog dying during the race, two on separate teams collapsed and died Sunday, and another died Tuesday. Efforts to resuscitate all three dogs were unsuccessful.
Mushers Issac Teaford, of Salt Lake City, and Hunter Keefe, of Knik, both voluntarily scratched or they would have risked being removed by the race marshal because dogs in their care died during the race, per Iditarod rules. The third dog, a 3-year-old male named Henry on rookie Calvin Daugherty’s team, collapsed on the trail about 10 miles (16 kilometers) before reaching the checkpoint in the village of Shaktoolik. A necropsy is planned, and Daugherty also scratched.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the loudest critic of the Iditarod, called for officials to end the race.
“The Iditarod is the shame of Alaska,” PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman said in a statement. “How many more dogs need to die before this stops? Dogs’ lives are worth more than this.”
Before the race even started, officials disqualified Eddie Burke Jr., the race’s rookie of the year last year, as well as 2022 champion Brent Sass as allegations of violence against women embroiled the Iditarod.
Race officials disqualified Burke on Feb. 19. But the state of Alaska then dropped charges alleging he choked his then-girlfriend in 2022, and the Iditarod Trail Committee reinstated him. He ultimately withdrew because he had leased his dogs to other mushers when he was disqualified and couldn’t reassemble his team in time for the race.
The committee also disqualified Sass without explanation, other than pointing to a rule governing personal and professional conduct, and race officials refused to discuss it during a media briefing ahead of the race.
Sass said in a Facebook post he was “beyond disappointed” and that the “anonymous accusations” made against him were “completely false.” No criminal cases against Sass appear in online Alaska court records.
The race started March 2 for 38 mushers with a ceremonial run in Anchorage. The competitive start was held the following day 75 miles (120 kilometers) north of Anchorage. Since then, seven mushers have withdrawn.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Warming Trends: Smelly Beaches in Florida Deterred Tourists, Plus the Dearth of Climate Change in Pop Culture and Threats to the Colorado River
- UN Report Says Humanity Has Altered 70 Percent of the Earth’s Land, Putting the Planet on a ‘Crisis Footing’
- The life and possible death of low interest rates
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Dylan Mulvaney Calls Out Bud Light’s Lack of Support Amid Ongoing “Bullying and Transphobia”
- The New US Climate Law Will Reduce Carbon Emissions and Make Electricity Less Expensive, Economists Say
- Activists Deplore the Human Toll and Environmental Devastation from Russia’s Unprovoked War of Aggression in Ukraine
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Biden Tightens Auto Emissions Standards, Reversing Trump, and Aims for a Quantum Leap on Electric Vehicles by 2030
Ranking
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- When AI works in HR
- Some Jews keep a place empty at Seder tables for a jailed journalist in Russia
- A regional sports network bankruptcy means some baseball fans may not see games on TV
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Two mysterious bond market indicators
- 25 hospitalized after patio deck collapses during event at Montana country club
- No, the IRS isn't calling you. It isn't texting or emailing you, either
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Gloomy global growth, Tupperware troubles, RIP HBO Max
Video: Aerial Detectives Dive Deep Into North Carolina’s Hog and Poultry Waste Problem
About 1 in 10 young adults are vaping regularly, CDC report finds
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
White House to establish national monument honoring Emmett Till
Why Tia Mowry Says Her 2 Kids Were Part of Her Decision to Divorce Cory Hardrict
More states enacting laws to allow younger teens to serve alcohol, report finds