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Iditarod sledder quits race when his dogs won't mush
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[March 12, 2019]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Stuck on
ice with dogs that refused to mush, lead Iditarod sledder Nicolas
Petit dropped from the famed Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race late
Monday.
An early favorite in the world’s best-known dog-sled race, Petit had
been stuck for most of the day with his dogs on a section of Bering
Sea ice about 200 miles from the finish line in Nome. The dogs
refused to move, and Petit ultimately had them taken off the trail
by snowmobile.
"Petit scratched in the best interest of his race team’s mental
well-being," said a statement released by Iditarod race managers.
The 1,000-mile race started on March 2 in Anchorage. The winner will
take home about $50,000 and a new truck, part of a total race purse
of $500,000.
Fifty-two mushers started the race. As of Monday night, seven,
including Petit, had dropped out.
The winner is expected in Nome sometime early Wednesday.
The new Iditarod leaders as of Monday night were Pete Kaiser of
Bethel, Alaska; Joar Leifseth Ulsom, a Norwegian musher who won last
year’s race; and Jessie Royer of Fairbanks.
Kaiser, who is Yupik, would be the first Alaska Native musher to win
the Iditarod since 2011. As of late Monday, he was at the village of
Elim, about 120 miles from the Nome finish line.
Royer would be the first woman to win the race since 1990, when
Susan Butcher claimed her fourth victory.
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Nicolas Petit checks his dogs before the ceremonial start of the
47th Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Anchorage, Alaska, U.S. March
2, 2019. REUTERS/Kerry Tasker
Petit ran into trouble last year in nearly the same spot of the
Bering Sea Coast when he was in position to win the 2018 race. But
Petit, a French musher who lives in the Alaska ski community of
Girdwood, got lost in a snowstorm. Leisfeth Ulsom passed him, and
Petit wound up in second place.
This year’s collapse was precipitated by a dog fight, Petit told
race officials. The troubles started when a dog named Joee jumped on
a younger dog, Petit said in a video posted on the Iditarod’s
website.
"I yelled at Joee. And everybody heard Daddy yelling. It doesn’t
happen. And then they wouldn’t go anymore. Anywhere. So we camped
here," he said in the interview, conducted Monday morning on the
Bering Sea coast.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage, Alaska; additional writing
by Rich McKay in Atlanta; editing by Larry King)
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