Iditarod

LATEST SNIPPET

The 2016 Iditarod Sled Dog race started on March 5 with 26 women and 59 men.

Stay tuned. http://bit.ly/YGFWjZ See scorecard here.

 

Direct short-cut to this page: http://bit.ly/YGFWjZ

Background
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race 2000-2023
Race and Results -
2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
Iditarod Women
Iditarod Winners
Jr. Iditarod
News

Initarod 2013 Kicks Off With Festive Ceremonial Start In Anchorage
Riddles' win opens the door for Women
Women Who Have Run the Iditarod (1974-2002) - Help!

Snippets
Related Issue: Iditarod Women, Women Racers Directory, Women in Racing, Women Racers, More Women in Racing, Race Schedules, Notable Women Contact: www.iditarod.com

Background: The Last Great Race on Earth


You can’t compare it to any other competitive event in the world! A race over 1150 miles of the roughest, most beautiful terrain Mother Nature has to offer. She throws jagged mountain ranges, frozen river, dense forest, desolate tundra and miles of windswept coast at the mushers and their dog teams. Add to that temperatures far below zero, winds that can cause a complete loss of visibility, the hazards of overflow, long hours of darkness and treacherous climbs and side hills, and you have the Iditarod. A race extraordinaire, a race only possible in Alaska.

From Anchorage, in south central Alaska, to Nome on the western Bering Sea coast, each team of 12 to 16 dogs and their musher cover over 1150 miles in 10 to 17 days.

It has been called the “Last Great Race on Earth” and it has won worldwide acclaim and interest. German, Spanish, British, Japanese and American film crews have covered the event. Journalists from outdoor magazines, adventure magazines, newspapers and wire services flock to Anchorage and Nome to record the excitement. It’s not just a dog sled race, it’s a race in which unique men and woman compete. Mushers enter from all walks of life. Fishermen, lawyers, doctors, miners, artists, natives, Canadians, Swiss, French and others; men and women each with their own story, each with their own reasons for going the distance. It’s a race organized and run primarily by volunteers, thousands of volunteers, men and women, students and village residents. They man headquarters at Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, Nome and Wasilla. They fly volunteers, veterinarians, dog food and supplies. They act as checkers, coordinators, and family supporters of each musher.

The Spirit of Alaska! More Than a Race… a Commemoration

The race pits man and animal against nature, against wild Alaska at her best and as each mile is covered, a tribute to Alaska’s past is issued. The Iditarod is a tie to — a commemoration of — that colorful past.

The Iditarod Trail, now a National Historic Trail, had its beginnings as a mail and supply route from the coastal towns of Seward and Knik to the interior mining camps at Flat, Ophir, Ruby and beyond to the west coast communities of Unalakleet, Elim, Golovin, White Mountain and Nome. Mail and supplies went in. Gold came out. All via dog sled. Heroes were made, legends were born.

In 1925, part of the Iditarod Trail became a life saving highway for epidemic-stricken Nome. Diphtheria threatened and serum had to be brought in; again by intrepid dog mushers and their faithful hard-driving dogs.

The Iditarod is a commemoration of those yesterdays, a not-so-distant past that Alaskans honor and are proud of.

An Event for All Alaska

Anchorage is the starting line — a city of over 250,000 people, street lights, freeways and traffic. From there the field of dog teams which grow in number each year, runs to Eagle River, Checkpoint # 1. After a restart in the Matanuska Valley at Wasilla, the mushers leave the land of highways and bustling activity and head out to the Yentna Station Roadhouse and Skwentna and then up! Through Finger Lake, Rainy Pass, over the Alaska Range and down the other side to the Kuskokwim River — Rohn Roadhouse, Nikolai, McGrath, Ophir, Cripple, Iditarod and on to the mighty Yukon — a river highway that takes the teams west through the arctic tundra.

The race route is alternated every other year, one year going north through Cripple, Ruby and Galena, the next year south through Iditarod, Shageluk, Anvik.

Finally, they’re on the coast — Unalakleet, Shaktoolik, Koyuk, Elim, Golovin, White Mountain and into Nome where a hero’s welcome is the custom for musher number 1 or 61!

The route encompasses large metropolitan areas and small native villages. It causes a yearly spurt of activity, increased airplane traffic and excitement to areas otherwise quiet and dormant during the long Alaskan winter. Everyone gets involved, from very young school children to the old timers who relive the colorful Alaskan past they’ve known as they watch each musher and his team. The race is an educational opportunity and an economic stimulus to these small Alaskan outposts.

The “I” logo, a trademark of the Iditarod Trail Committee, Inc. and the Iditarod Race, was designed by Alaskan artist Bill DeVine in the early years of the race. The design is done on a white background with blue thread for the dog and inner outline. The Outer outline is done in red. The design is used on a shield in some instances and that variation was used on wooden trail markers in the earlier races.

On the Trail

Every musher has a different tactic. Each one has a special menu for feeding and snacking the dogs. Each one has a different strategy — some run in the daylight, some run at night. Each one has a different training schedule and his own ideas on dog care, dog stamina and his own personal ability.

The rules of the race lay out certain regulations which each musher must abide by. There are certain pieces of equipment each team must have — an arctic parka, a heavy sleeping bag, an ax, snowshoes, musher food, dog food and boots for each dog’s feet to protect against cutting ice and hard packed snow injuries.

Some mushers spend an entire year getting ready and raising the money needed to get to Nome. Some prepare around a full-time job. In addition to planning the equipment and feeding needs for up to three weeks on the trail, hundreds of hours and hundreds of miles of training have to be put on each team.

There are names which are automatically associated with the race — Joe Redington, Sr., co-founder of the classic and affectionately know as “Father of the Iditarod.” Rick Swenson from Two River, Alaska, the only five time winner, the only musher to have entered 20 Iditarod races and never finished out of the top ten. Dick Mackey from Nenana who beat Swenson by one second in 1978 to achieve the impossible photo finish after two weeks on the trail. Norman Vaughan who at the age of 88 has finished the race four times and led an expedition to Antarctica in the winter of 93–94. Four time winner, Susan Butcher, was the first woman to ever place in the top 10. And of course, Libby Riddles, the first woman to win the Iditarod in 1985.

There are others — Herbie Nayokpuk, Shishmaref; Emmitt Peters, Ruby, whose record set in 1975 was not broken until 1980, when Joe May, Trapper Creek, knocked seven hours off the record… the flying Anderson’s, Babe and Eep, from McGrath.. Rick Mackey, who wearing his father Dick’s winning #13, crossed the finish line first in 1983, making them the only father and son to have both won an Iditarod… Joe Runyan, 1989 champion and the only musher to have won the Alpirod (European long distance race), the Yukon Quest, (long distance race between Fairbanks and Whitehorse, YT) and the Iditarod… Terry Adkins, retired from the United States Air Force, the only veterinarian on the first Iditarod and one of the two musher to have completed 20 out of 23 Iditarods. (The other is Rick Swenson.) The list goes on, each name bringing with it a tale of adventure, a feeling of accomplishment, a touch of hero. Each musher, whether in the top ten, or winner of the Red Lantern (last place) has accomplished a feat few dare to attempt. Each has gone the distance and established a place for their team in the annals of Iditarod lore.
Source: www.iditarod.com/learn/

Snippets


The 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race ended at 1:15 pm (AST) today with14 of 16 women finishing and 40 of 50 men finishing. http://bit.ly/YGFWjZ See scorecard here.

*    *    *

Five of the women have crossed the finish line at the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race, 1 scratched leaving 10 still on the trail.

*     *     *

Mitch Seavey has won the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race in 9 days, 7 hours and 39 minutes. Aliy Zirkle finished 2nd for the second year in a row just 24 minutes behind Seavey.

*     *     *

9 men and our first woman, Jan Steves, have scratched, in the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race. Aliy Zirkle is 25 minutes behind the leader with 22 miles to go.

*     *     *

2 more men drop out with 77 miles to go in the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race and Aliy Zirkle ia only 13 minutes behind the leader.

*     *     *

80 miles to go in the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race and Aliy Zirkle ia only 23 minutes behind the leader.

*     *     *

A sixth man has scratched and all 16 women are still on the trail at 21:07:31 on 3/11 in the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race.

*     *     *

A fourth man has scratched. All 16 women are still on the trail and Aliy Zirkle is in 2nd at 22:31:25 on 3/7 in the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race.

*     *     *

As Tuesday comes to a close on the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race, women hold 3 of the top 8 positions
(3, 7, 8)

*     *     *

As Monday comes to a close on the 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race, women hold 5 of the top 8 positions
(2, 3, 6, 7, 8)

*     *     *

The 2013 Iditarod Sled Dog race will begin March 2 at exactly 10:00am AST from
Anchorage with 16 of the 66 mushers (24%) are women including 4 rookies. Mushers take the southern route in odd years, and the northern route in even years. This year it's the southern route.

* * *

The 2012 Iditarod Sled Dog race began March 3 at exactly 10:00am AST from
Anchorage with 17 of the 66 mushers (26%) women. The race concluded on 3/19 with Rookie Jan Stevens and her 9 dogs bringing in the Red Lantern in 53rd at 2:57a (AST), one minute and 53 second behind 52nd place and his 14 dogs.

*     *     *

The 2012 Iditarod Sled Dog race began March 3 at exactly 10:00am AST from
Anchorage with 17 of the 66 mushers (26%) women.

*     *     *

The winner of the 2011 Iditarod Sled Dog race was John Baker on 3/15/11 at 9:46am. Ramey Smith was 2nd. Three women arrived early Wednesday morning. Jessie Royer in 10th, Aliy Zirkle in 11th, and Dee Dee Jonrowe in 12th. The race concluded on 3/20 with Ellen Halverson bringing in the Red Lantern at 10:45a (AST)

*     *     *

The toughest race around (1112 miles in 10 days). The re-strat begins March 6, 2011 at 2pm AST, 6pm EST. 24% of the field are women. The Iditarod.

News


Iditarod 2013 Kicks Off With Festive Ceremonial Start In Anchorage


Mushers and their dogs took a leisurely jaunt through Anchorage on Saturday in the ceremonial start of Alaska's Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

The 1,000-mile race kicked off in a festive mood as 66 teams posed with fans and sailed their sleds 11 miles on streets covered with trucked-in snow. Each sled carried an Iditarider, a fan who won the short ride at auction.

"Today is fun, with a capital F," said smiling veteran musher Aliy Zirkle, the runner-up in last year's race. "If you don't have a good time on Saturday with your dogs and all these fans, you're not in the right sport."

The event comes ahead of the real, competitive start of the race Sunday in Willow, 50 miles to the north. This is when teams leave the big crowds behind for remote terrain shared mostly with their dogs.

"Today we have fun. Tomorrow we're serious," defending champion Dallas Seavey, of Willow, said Saturday between chatting with spectators and signing autographs for fans, including Bunky Nistler of Beach, N.D.

Nistler said the Iditarod was on her bucket list following her husband's death of cancer a year ago.

"I've been in love with the Iditarod for over eight years," she said. "This was my dream of a lifetime."

From Willow, where the race clock starts ticking, mushers and their dog teams will begin making their way through unforgiving wilderness toward the finish line in the old frontier town of Nome on Alaska's western coast. Before reaching their destination, the teams will cross mountains, frozen rivers and forests before hitting the wind-pummeled coast. They'll sign in at village checkpoints, sometimes stopping for mandatory layovers.

The winner will get a new truck and $50,400. The rest of the $600,000 purse will be split between the next 29 mushers to cross the finish line.
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/03/iditarod-2013-start-anchorage_n_2799870.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl33%7Csec3_lnk3%26pLid%3D277933

Iditarod Winners


Of 658 mushers who have run the Iditarod, only15 have won as of 1/2/03

Source: www.geocities.com/taekwondoman2002/rankings.html

2016 26 women in the field of 85 (34.4%)
2015
2014
2013 16 women in the field of 66 (24.2%)
2012 17 women in the field of 66 (25.8%)
2011 15 women in the field of 62 (24.2%)
2010 15 women in the field of 71 (21.1%)
2009 13 women in the field of 67 (19.4%)
2008 22 women in field of 96 (22.9%)
2007 12 women in field of 82 (14.6%)
2006 15 women in field of 83 (18.1%)


2016 6 girls in the field of 10 (60.0%)
2012 Jr. Iditarod - XXXV, 2/25-26, 2012
2012 Iditrod - XL - 3/3/12

Iditarod Trail Committee announced that 74 mushers have signed up to run the 975 mile 2012 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race including 18 women, three more than last year. 68 mushers started the race including 17 women. At this time 6 of the 22 rookies entered in Iditarod XL are women.

*    *    *

2011 Jr. Iditarod - 2/26/11
2011 Iditrod - 3/5/11

*     *     *

Iditarod Trail Committee announced that 72 mushers have signed up to run the 2010 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race including 16 women, the same as last year. At this time 7 of the 22 rookies entered in Iditarod XXXVIII are women.

2010 Jr. Iditarod - 2/27/10
2010 Iditrod - 3/6/10

*     *     *

Iditarod Trail Committee announced today (December 5, 2008) that 71 mushers have signed up to run the 2009 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race including 16 women. At this time 5 of the 16 rookies entered in Iditarod XXXVII are women.

2009 Jr. Iditarod - 2/28/09
2009 Iditrod - 3/7/09

*     *     *

2008 is the 36th running of the 1,100 mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. Click Status of the Women as of 20:36:12 on 3/17/08. The race started on March 1st and the first person finished on 3/12/08 at 2:46:48. Deborah Bicknell, a rookie, was the Red Lantern crossing the finish line in the 78th spot at 20:36:12 on March 17. Seventeen musher scratched and one withdrew.

2016

44th (XLIIV) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2016
Northern Route - Miles
Standings on AKDT
Keep track here  http://bit.ly/yMYKCH

Place

As of 3/5/16

Bib
3/6
3/8
3/10
3/12
3/14
3/16
3/18

Musher

Finish

Comments

42
63
76
71
74

Kristin Bacon

R

14
11
39
40
36

Jodi Bailey

23
17
51
45
45

Anna Berington

83
82
50
46
44

Kristy Berington

74
76
S
S
S
S
S
S

Zoya de Nure

S

3/8 09:50:0066

75
43
46
36
43

Page Drobny

27
29
17
25
25

Sigrid Ekran

34
51
73
69
72

Kim Franklin

73
75
77
68
73

Cindy Gallea

29
56
79
80
77

Ellen Halverson

49
60
81
78
75

Mary Helwig

R

76
77
48
39
37

Karin Hendrickson

45
28
63
52
47

Dee Dee Jonrowe

85
74
30
34
35

Katherine Kieth

22
16
59
60
55

Becca Moore

7
3
57
54
63

Lisbet Norris

44
67
68
69
54

Ryne Olson

65
73
74
75
64

Miriam Osredkar

R

47
61
72
61
59

Kristin Knight Pace

R

30
20
11
21
7

Michelle Phillips

4
4
9
9
11

Jessie Royer

25
52
S
S
S
S
S
S

Jan Steves

S

3/7-03:12:00

82
42
60
70
62

Melissa Owens Stewart

71
74
66
47
57

Sarah Stokey

R

8
9
53
53
53

Monica Zppa

13
14
4
3
2

Aliy Zirkle

2015

43rd (XLII I) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2015
Northern Route - Miles
Standings on AKDT
Keep track here  http://bit.ly/yMYKCH

Place

As of 2/18/14

3/1

Musher

Finish

Comments

Cindy Abbott

66

RL

Laura Allaway

46

Jodi Bailey

30

Anna Berington

28

Kristy Berington

29

Gwenn Bogart

S

Yvonne Dabakk

53

R

Zoya de Nure

S

Page Drobny

27

R

Cindy Gallea

64

Ellen Halverson

S

Dee Dee Jonrowe

31

Katherine Kieth

S

Becca Moore

57

Lisbet Norris

49

Michelle Phillips

20

Christine Roalofs

S

Jessie Royer

4

Jan Steves

S

Heidi Suttter

48

Isabelle Travadon

61

R

Monica Zppa

27

Aliy Zirkle

5

 

2014

42nd (XLII ) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2014
Northern Route - Miles
Standings on AKDT
Keep track here  http://bit.ly/yMYKCH

Place

As of 2/18/14

3/1

Musher

Finish

Comments

Cindy Abbott R

S

Anna Berington

39

Kristy Berington

30

Yvonne Dabakk

45

R

Page Drobny

25

R

Marcelle Fressineau

49

R RL

Cindy Gallea

S

Ellen Halverson

S

Karin Hendrickson

36

Dee Dee Jonrowe

S

Katherine Kieth

32

R

Lisbet Norris

48

R

Michelle Phillips

20

Karen Ramstead

S

Jessie Royer

7

Jan Steves

S

Abbie West

18

R

Monica Zppa

47

R

Aliy Zirkle

2

2013

41st (XLI ) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2013
Southern Route - 1049 Miles
Standings on AKDT
Keep track here  http://bit.ly/yMYKCH

Place
3/2
3/4
3/6
3/8
3/10
3/12
3/14
Finish
Musher
60
63
64
62
60
55
-
S

Cindy Abbott R

4
29
9
45
49
40
44
44

Jodi Bailey

31
41
37
41
46
44
43
43

Anna Berington

20
40
36
40
45
43
42
42

Kristy Berington

W
-
-
-
-
-
-
W

Zoya de Nure

14
42
47
43
38
36
34
34

Paige Drobny R

17
53
39
53
54
51
51
51

Cindy Gallea

9
22
28
28
27
26
26
26

Kelley Griffin

54
36
45
29
26
25
25
25

Jessica Hendricks

29
45
34
38
34
35
40
40

Karin Hendrickson

28
19
16
12
10
11
10
10

Dee Dee Jonrowe

7
7
22
19
22
23
24
24

Michelle Phillips

37
62
62
60
56
53
53
54

Christine Roalofs R RL

W
-
-
-
-
-
-
W

Susie Rogan R

30
17
15
5
15
18
18
18

Jessie Royer

26
59
55
59
58
S
-
S

Jan Steves

40
60
54
57
52
47
48
48

Angie Taggart

27
2
13
2
4
2
2
2

Aliy Zirkle

Legend: R - Rookie; RL - Red Lantern (last), S - Scratched; W-Withdrew.

2012

40th (XL ) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2012
Northern Route
Standings on AKDT
Keep track here  http://bit.ly/yMYKCH
Direct shortcut to this spot:
http://bit.ly/ymqVJG

Place

As of 3:32

3/3

3/6

3/8

3/10

3/12

3/14

3/16

Musher
Finish

Comments

6

35

30

32

25

21

23

Jodi Bailey

23

3/15 11:19:53

33

52

42

51

45

43

43

Anna Berington R

43

3/16 17:16:30

31

51

43

50

44

44

42

Kristy Berington

44

3/16 17:17:13

53

47

52

46

S

S

S

Zoya de Nure

S

10:59 at Cripple

24

24

24

12

11

11

11

Sigrid Ekran

11

3/14 06:50:16

54

62

S

S

S

S

S

Silvia Furtwangler R

S

21:17 at Nikolai

20

2

45

24

26

24

27

Kelly Griffin

27

3/15 13:29:06

43

41

41

45

41

36

36

Karin Hendrickson

36

3/16 09:32:36

17

23

17

7

12

10

10

Dee Dee Jonrowe

10

3/14 05:43:15 Humanitarian

30

59

59

58

51

49

48

Jaimee Kinzer R

47

3/17 06:58:30

46

28

35

43

33

25

31

Ryne Olson R

31

3/15 16:33:40

25

6

18

13

13

17

16

Michelle Phillips

16

3/14 23:18:01

56

56

57

52

47

47

46

Karen Ramstead

50

3/17 15:21:30

42

38

47

31

22

27

21

Colleen Robertia

21

3/15 11:04:19

W

W

W

W

W

W

W

Tamara Rose

W

W

W

W

W

W

W

W

W

Jessie Royer

W

W

32

25

33

27

21

26

26

Anjanette Steer R

26

3/15 13:02:45

40

63

63

62

57

53

52

Jan Steves R

53

RL 3/19 02:57 Red Latern

14

1

6

2

2

2

1

Aliy Zirkle

2

3/13 at 20:29:10

Legend: R - Rookie; RL - Red Lantern (last), S - Scratched; W-Withdrew.

2011

39th (XXXIX ) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2011
Southern Route
Standings on AKDT
Keep track here 
Direct shortcut to this spot:
http://bit.ly/fgEaOc

Place*

.2011

Bib
3/6
3/7
3/8

3/9

3/13

3/14

3/15

Musher
Finish

Comments

16

27

48

43

37

35

34

33

Jodi Bailey R

31

3/17 4:30p

7

11

28

29

30

28

31

30

Kristy Berington

29

3/17 11:02a

29

13

18

21

40

S

-

-

Judy Currier

S

At Anvik 3/12

9

9

24

S

-

-

-

-

Zoya de Nure

S

At Rainy Pass

20

52

30

25

27

24

27

27

Kelly Griffin

26

3/17 4:03a

26

55

54

53

49

50

50

48

Ellen Halverson

27

3/20 104a RL

36

30

39

S

-

-

-

-

Jessica Hendricks

S

At Nikolai

37

21

26

30

29

23

23

20

Karin Hendrickson

S

At White Mtn

2

3

21

14

17

8

10

10

Dee Dee Jonrowe

12

3/16 at 1:24a

12

2

42

S

-

-

-

-

Melissa Owens

S

At Rainy Pass

39

16

31

23

25

19

17

17

Michelle Phillips

17

3/16 11:22a

58

42

5

18

22

10

8

9

Jessie Royer

10

3/16 at 12:23a

50

62

53

54

50

48

49

47

Heather Siirtola

46

3/20 10:24a

19

29

55

52

48

44

45

44

Angie Taggart R

43

3/19 4:49

18

24

6

16

20

11

13

12

Aliy Zirkle

11

3/16 at 1:27a Humanitarian

Legend: R - Rookie; RL - Red Lantern (last), S - Scratched; W-Withdrew. *End of day

2010

First woman to finish was Jessie Royer in 15th. Aliy Zirkle was 16th, Dee Dee Jonrowe in 22nd, and Michelle Phillips, the first female rookie, was 27th. The only two male rookies before her were in 21st and 26th. Then came Collen Roberth in 36th, Kristy Berington (R) in 39th, Cindy Gallea in 40th, Tamara Rose (R) in 43rd, Jane Faulkner (R) in 53rd and Celeste Davis (R) in 55th place carrying the Red Lantern representing the last of 71 mushers still in the race.

38th (XXXVIII)running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2010
Northern Route
Standings on AKDT
(Current as of 3/14/10)

Place

Comments - 2010

3/11
3/14
3/17
3/20
Musher
Finish

12
10
16

.

Aliy Zirkle

16

9:05.10

S

.

Karin Hendrickson

S

Out at Rainy Pass

60
57
56
53

Jane Faulkner R

53

17:51:50

20
14
15

.

Jessie Royer

15

7:04:40

33
33
S
.

Judy Currier

S

Out at Galena

26
25
22

.

Dee Dee Jonrowe

22

17:47.44

S
.
.
.

Kathleen Frederick R

S

Out at Rohn

51
47
43

.

Tamara Rose R

43

15:39:29

30
30
27

.

Michelle Phillips R

27

23:31:12

40
40
40

.

Cindy Gallea

40

23:12:01

S
.
.
.

Zoya de Nure

S

Out at Rainy Pass

S
.
.
.

Karen Ramstead

S

Out at McGrath

42
41
39

Kristy Berington R

39

21:44:02

58
56
54
55

Celeste Davis R

55

20:06:40 RL

45
36
36

.

Colleen Robertia R

36x

14:56:10

W
W
W
W

Sue Allen

W

.

W
W
W
W

Lynda Plettner

W

.

W
W
W
W

Nancy Yoshida R

W

.

W
W
W
W

Kim Darst R

W

.

Legend:: R - Rookie; RL - Red Lantern (last), S - Scratched; W-Withdrew

Results - 2009


While the scew is just slightly in favor of the women finishing and rookie women finishing, it shows that women and men are pretty equally matched in the Iditarod. And, with few exceptions, that sponsorship has a huge roll in how far up the finishing ladder you end up.

Mushers
Women
Men

Total (71)

16 (22%)

55 (78%)

Rookies (16)

5 (31%)

11 (69%)

Finished (52)

9

Rookies Finishing ()

1

Scratched/withdrew ()

4

Rookies scratched ()

2

Legend: R - Rookie; S - Scratch; W - Withdrawn

37th (XXXVII) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2009
Southern Route
Standings on AKDT

( Women represent 13 of 67 mushers)

2009
Finish
Musher
Bib Number
3/19
17

Ally Zirkle

24
3/21
40

Karin Hendrickson (R)

29

?

Debbie Moderow

?

Francine Bennis

(S)

Melissa Owens

30
3/19
8

Jessie Royer

17
3/20
26

Judy Currier

22
3/19
13

Dee Dee Jonrowe

31

(S)

Nancy Yoshida (R)

3

(S)

Laura Daugereau

45

(S)

Kim Darst (R)

52
3/22
45

Rachael Scdoris

58
3/21
41

Cindy Gallea

49
3/23
51

Heather Siirtola

63
3/22
43

Jen Seavey (R)

61

?

Debra Glenn (R)

(W)

Sigrid Ekran

(W)

Silvia Willis

Legend: R - Rookie; S - Scratch; W - Withdrawn

 

Results - 2008


While the scew is just slightly in favor of the women finishing and rookie women finishing, it shows that women and men are pretty equally matched in the Iditarod. And, with few exceptions, that sponsorship has a huge roll in how far up the finishing ladder you end up.

Mushers

Women
Men

Total (96)

22 (23%)

74 (77%)

Rookies (33)

10 (30%)

23 (70%)

Finished (78)

18 (23%)

60 (77%)

Rookies Finishing

8 (31%)

18 (69%)

Scratched/withdrew (18)

4 (22%)

14 (78%)

Rookies scratched (7)

2 (29%)

5 (71%)

36th (XXXVI) running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race - 2008
Northern Route
Standings early Sunday, 3/17/08 at 1051 AKDT

3/8/08
Finish
Musher
Bib Number
11
14

Jessie Royer

3
13
15

DeeDee Jonrowe

39
25
21

Aliy Zirkle

17
27
22

Silvia Willis

40
16
24

Sigrid Ekran

24
30
30

Melissa Owens (R)

59
41
39

Cindy Gallea

82
54
45

Kelley Griffin

86
51
50

Jennifer Freking (R)

60
57
53

Zoya DeNure (R)

89
58
56

Karen Ramstead

19
68
64

Laura Daugereau (R)

29
78
66

Anne Capistrant (R)

88
77
70

Sue Allen

27
81
72

Sue Morgan (R)

72
75
74

Heather Siirtola

47
88
77

Liz Parrish (R)

75
89
78

Deborah Bicknell (R) Red Lantern

21
40
S 3/16

Molly Yazwinski (R)

62
73
S 3/13

Rachael Scdoris

55
93
W 3/5

Kim Franklin (R)

79
91
S 3/4

Jessica Hendricks

23
Legend: R - Rookie; S - Scratch; W - Withdrawn

Source: www.adn.com/iditarod/interactives/story/333339.html

Women Who Have Run the Iditarod (1974-2002 + 2008-12)


I count 116 women who ran the Iditarod between 1974-2002 and 2008-12. Six of those are rookies scheduled to run in 2012. I'm missing additions for 2003-07. Have I missed anyone else? Do I have someone in here who I confused as a woman because of the name?

Source: www.geocities.com/taekwondoman2002/rankings.html

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