Showing posts with label top ten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label top ten. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Twelve teams join Holmes in Nome

After Jessie Holmes' dominating second consecutive Iditarod win Tuesday night, it has been a very busy day in Nome as teams came in for much of the day. The top ten (plus one) are a whose who of the new generation of mushing with one team talking retirement after many years in The Last Great Race. From just before 2am AKDST to after 7:30pm ten teams crossed under the burled arch to take their place in another historic Iditarod.

Most teams came in with dogs looking strong, perky, and in many cases wondering why they were stopping. The mushers looked much worse for wear with deep windburn evident on their faces and any other place that skin was exposed to the elements. The wind started the first full day of the race and barely ever let up. Temps for the first half of the race saw consistent negative temps dropping to more than -40F at night (when teams do their best running). The dogs seem to thrive in these conditions, but the mushers look exhausted no matter how much rest they managed on the trail.

Travis Beals is our second place finisher this year. The musher's previous highest placement has been fifth place in 2019. Beals has had a roller coaster of a season emotionally. At the end of 2025 his mother died, and just a few weeks later his second son was born. Both events changed some plans for racing leading up to Iditarod, and some speculated what Travis would do here on the race to Nome. The musher is one of the best students of the trail, taking every race and learning something from it. He said in his burled arch interview that he learned a lot about himself and the dogs this year and was so very proud of the accomplishment. Though in earlier race interviews Beals seemed disappointed that he couldn't come up with the winning strategy, he will no doubt look back on this one with pride.

Jeff Deeter was a surprise third place finish after having held his team further back early in the race. Deeter made a push on the run from Unalakleet to Koyuk, picking off teams one by one. Like Beals it seems the only thing stopping Deeter from an even higher placement was running out of real estate. The musher was all smiles as he made his way under the burled arch and his dogs were happily wagging their tails as they recognized KattiJo Deeter in the chute. Deeter came into Nome at 5:10am AKDST.

Paige Drobny finished fourth, a noble battle at the end of a race where she spent most of the time in second place. Just getting to the start line this year was a win for Paige as she has been battling "an aggressive form of breast cancer" since her diagnosis in August. Drobny and her Squids ran a beautiful race, but due to the extreme cold the musher had issues with equipment pretty much from the start. Her alarm clock died on her and she overslept on a key rest out on the trail running to the Yukon. Her phone battery died and she had no way to charge it on the trail because her USB cables snapped in the cold making her external chargers useless. She was tired. Probably more tired than she expected with the cold zapping every musher's energy quickly. But she perservered. She said in Unalakleet she believed her dogs capable of catching Jessie at that point, but that she didn't believe in pushing them to their limit to do so. Dogs first. Paige came in Wednesday at 5:38am AKDST after racing Deeter all the way.

Wade Marrs had a steep learning curve running dogs he admitted under the burled arch were a different speed than what he was used to. The team of dogs out of Mitch Seavey's kennel that he integrated with several of his own kennel weren't quite as speedy as he was used to but "they never quit". Many fans are saying Marrs had the "cutest" finish as he was met but his two young sons who excitedly yelled out "DADA" when they realized the musher in the chute was theirs. The oldest chasing his dad around wanting to be close, the younger going up to each dog and giving them big hugs. Marrs ran a style similar to that of Seavey where he held back through the half way point where he quickly picked off teams and jumped into the top ten, ending in fifth place. After a three year hiatus Marrs reminded everyone why he's one to watch.