'); } -->
It wasn't a rock concert or a pivotal Anchorage Aces hockey game. Rather, the annual mushers banquet filled the parking lot at Sullivan Arena with cars Thursday night. Inside, a crowd of 1,500 Iditarod fans and sponsors crowded onto the floor to mingle with their favorite competitors.
As a group, Iditarod mushers may be the oldest elite athletes in the world.
Thousands of fans lined Fourth AvenueSaturday to cheer on 56 mushers at the ceremonial start of the 27th annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, the longest and most famous sled dog race in the world.
Jeff King had a great night's sleep before the official start of the Iditarod in Wasilla Sunday except for a dream he had about rival Rick Swenson.
Add the name of an Indiana grade school teacher to the record-splitting list of rookies in this year's Iditarod.
McGrath hospitality revives tired teams
MCGRATH - Harry Caldwell yawned. He sipped some coffee. Then he yawned again.
UNALAKLEET - Montana's Doug Swingley, who holds the fastest Iditarod time in history, is threatening to make this year's race the most lopsided.
Montana team's oldest dog is first to die in race
A 3-year-old male dog named Rodman in the team of Jeremy Gebauer became the first to die in this year's Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.
Tenacity, 'airhead' dog lead Buser to 2nd
NOME - The 27th annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race almost drove Martin Buser crazy.
Swingley contemplates 8-day Iditarod
Given the right circumstances, Doug Swingley thinks his dog team could have made the Iditarod an 8-day race: If the trail had been better, if the weather had been better (no 44-degree below zero temperatures on the Yukon River), if there'd been more competition.
Thoroughly tested by violent Southwest Alaska weather, a frosty Doug Swingley pulled into Bethel early Tuesday morning behind a happy dog team to win the 20th anniversary Kuskokwim 300 Sled Dog Race.
John Barron is one of the gray eminences of the Iditarod. And not just metaphorically because of his longevity. He's got gray hair and a gray mustache. So gray it's going on white.
Alaska's ripe for Seward-to-Fairbanks stage race
The Next Great Race.
Swingley stretches lead in miserable wind
Wind-sculpted snowdrifts that form roof-high around the cabins of Kaltag each winter greeted Montanan Doug Swingley on Saturday as he led the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race off the bitterly cold Yukon River.
King gives up chase of the front-runners
Defending Iditarod champion Jeff King has given up any aspirations to keep up with second-place Martin Buser or third-place Rick Swenson. King's team of eight dogs was fourth into Unalakleet, less than two hours behind Swenson, but in need of a much longer rest.
Goosen claims Safety-to-Nome record
Shane Goosen's dogs may not be the fastest, but they can smell the barn.
Musher follows dream from Baltimore to Nome
On rolling hills outside Baltimore, where the average winter temperature hovers near 40 degrees and snow is cause for a citywide shutdown, Dan Dent is doing his best to train for 1,100 miles of Alaska wilderness.
Musher ponders future in wake of grizzly attack
FAIRBANKS - Sepp Herrmann finds himself at a spiritual crossroads.
Essay writer earns Iditaride of his life
INDIAN - Usually, D'Antoine Webb loves to talk. But at the first sight of "his" sled dogs, the Baltimore teen seemed to enter a trance.
Every team holds a string of personalities
Some of the biggest personalities on the Iditarod trail this year may not be Martin Buser, DeeDee Jonrowe or Jeff King but Shut up, Rascal and Wolf Man.
Mushers get creative when naming canines
ANCHORAGE - Iditarod veteran Bill Cotter figures his sled dogs are athletes, so it's not a real stretch to name them after others populating the world of sports.
Follow the mushers along the Iditarod trail's northern route, with live standings at each checkpoint.
Check out the The Last Great Race from the fans' perspective as readers post photos from every checkpoint along the Iditarod trail.
Armchair Musher: Sebastian Schnuelle
Musher Sebastian Schuelle will be following this year's Iditarod on snowmachine and writing about it for the ADN.
Follow the news and notes leading up to the Iditarod and, after the race begins, live from the trail.
Latest posts
Seavey on why he sued: 'I feel like I'm doing the right thing' 5/22 5:14 PM
Jonrowe wins dog care award; Mackey honored for sportsmanship 3/18 9:44 PM
Happy trails 3/16 2:47 PM
Third-place Ramey Smyth: 'I almost didn't get to the start line' 3/16 7:15 AM
Meet the Sled Dogs: Colleen & Penny 3/15 7:09 PM
Iditarod champion Dallas Seavey greets Aliy Zirkle in Nome after she finished in second place, an hour behind Seavey.
Happy mushers make for happy dogs. And vice versa, Iditarod racers say. Iditarod musher Brent Sass and Armchair Musher Sebastian Schnuelle explain it.
Race leaders Aliy Zirkle and Dallas Seavey talk about their race strategy in the last half of the Iditarod.
Scott Janssen's dog Marshall, who was resuscitated by Janssen on the trail, has a homecoming in Anchorage.
While resting at the Takotna checkpoint, 2011 Iditarod champion John Baker talks about whether Aliy Zirkle could win the race, what fans should make of the pace and how you might catch him dancing to 80s music on the dog sled.
Iditarod rookie Matt Failor was the last musher to leave the Skwentna checkpoint on Monday morning. Failor, from Mansfield, Ohio, explains why it's all part of the plan and why doesn't expect to stay in last place for long.
Sign-up for the Iditarod newsletter to receive "Postcards from the Trail," archived images sent out in the weeks leading up to the ceremonial start, and then our twice-daily updates during the race.
AnchorageShowers 50° (50°/47°)
Skwentna Mostly cloudy 50° (55°/39°)
McGrath Partly sunny 61° (61°/36°)
Kaltag Mostly cloudy 58° (61°/34°)
Unalakleet Cloudy 32° (36°/27°)
Nome Partly sunny 47° (46°/34°)
Rookie saves dog, loses Iditarod dream
Swingley leads run up the Yukon
Swenson still a force to be reckoned with
Race isn't over until King falls
As blizzard brews, elite Kusko 300 field awaits word on start
Iditarod features record purse
Up-and-comers test Iditarod veterans
There's no cure for this addiction
Bowers authors tales of travails
Swingley sprints to big payday
Many expect bumpy ride for mushers
Sign of the Iditarod: No parking
Mushers taking notice of Tunheim
Checkpoints offer relief to chilled Iditarod teams
This dog's been out way too long
Barron's Beargrease win masked multiple problems with dog team
Burled arch marking Iditarod finish snaps into pieces
Iditarod picks fall short again
Predicting Iditarod results is gut instinct
Joe Redington eyeing 2000 race
Race up for grabs as long breaks end
Whiteout clobbers mushers on Yukon