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<UID>
9101110641
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
910316
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<TDATE>
Saturday, March 16, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
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SPT
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<PAGE>
1B
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
Map ROGER HICKS
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<CAPTION>


:
Rick Swenson hugs his lead trail dogs Friday morning after they
ran through a blizzard to win the Iditarod.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BLIND AMBITION WINS IDITAROD
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
IDITAROD DIARY, CHAPTER 12: 

The Last Mile.

SOURCE: NOME, Alaska --  Finally, from the darkness, came the dogs. They loped
across the finish line, fell into the snow and wiped  the ice from their eyes.
 The winning musher, his face barely visible inside a  hood, trotted among
them, patting their heads. Good dogs. Good job. From behind makeshift fences,
shivering fans whooped and hollered, shattering  the stillness of downtown
Nome. It was 1:34 in the morning Friday. We had a winner.
  "ALASKA!" someone yelled. "WHERE THE MEN WIN THE IDITAROD -- AND THE WOMEN
TURN BACK!"
  "WHOOOOOOO!" the crowd  answered.
  And so it ends, between two telephone poles on Front Street, the Last
Great Race on Earth -- with drama and controversy, the way it should. The
winner, the new king, is former champion  Rick Swenson, a gruff, mustached,
40-year-old musher who was dumb enough to risk death, smart enough to avoid
it, and fed up enough to walk through a blizzard and pull the dogs -- that's
how much he  wanted this victory. And that's how much he wanted to beat Susan
Butcher, his arch-rival, who was leading the race until 71 miles from the
finish, before  a storm forced her and other mushers to return  to shelter --
and gave Swenson his opening. For six years he had been hearing about women's
victories in the Iditarod, and for much of that time he was made to feel
guilty. "What's the deal, Rick?" the macho types would ask, gulping another
beer. "You won this thing four times. How come these women keep beating you?"
  Maybe a Wall Street exec would say, "Now, gentlemen, the women earn it the
 same  as the men." And, of course, they do. But this is not Wall Street.
Stockbrokers don't cook meat for their dogs, sleep outside in sled bags and
snowshoe for miles in a blinding storm. Survival is the  currency here in the
Lonely Country. And Swenson was going to prove himself by surviving this race
-- and winning it.  His chilling odyssey over the final 23 hours will go down
in Alaskan folklore as truly remarkable. Which, around here, means all in a
day's work.
  "Weren't you scared?" someone asked Swenson in the bar of the Golden
Nugget Motel, where he was already sipping a Jack Daniel's  and Coke, less
than a hour after he had won this trans-Alaska sled dog race in 12 days, 16
hours, 34 minutes and 39 seconds. "You went out in a blinding snowstorm when
almost everyone else turned back.  No one could find you. You could have
died!"
  "Aw, hell, I wasn't gonna die," he snapped. "Not as long as I stayed on
the trail. Besides, what's my life worth, anyway? If I had to go back and
listen  to 365 days of that  crap -- 'How come women keep beating you?' Blah,
blah, blah -- I'd just as soon be dead."
  Like I said, this isn't Wall Street.
No room for the weak 
 But it is the end. Which  means a lot of things. Most of all, it means I can
go back to sleeping in a bed. And eating something for dinner besides Hershey
bars and coffee. It's a tough assignment, the Iditarod, pretty much back  to
basics. Or as Old Jim Okonek, my trusty pilot, might say: "Bathroom? Use a
snow drift."
  But, heck, my troubles were  nothing compared with the homestretch of
this race, out along the Bering  Sea and deep in the treeless hills, where
airplanes couldn't fly and snow machines had to turn back and nobody had a
clue as to Swenson's whereabouts.  Butcher had encountered him not far out
of the White Mountain checkpoint. His hands were freezing, his headlamp was
broken. She tried to travel with him, arch-rivals thrown together by danger.
But soon she lost him in the storm. Her dogs were  tired. She had driven them
hard in the first few days, trying not only for her fifth victory in six years
but also to set a  speed record. It cost her. Several windstorms had slowed
her progress. And  now, with another one burning her face, she made a fateful
decision.  "I can second-guess myself from now until I die," she later
admitted, ?=but emotionally, at that point, my dogs could not endure  another
55 miles in a storm."
  She returned to White Mountain and prayed for a change in the weather.
Because without it, she had just handed the race to Swenson. And she knew it.
  Swenson didn't.  He was still out there, poking around that blizzard like
a blind man. Returning to White Mountain never occurred to him. What for? So
he could lose the race, then listen to another year's worth of drunks  asking
why he couldn't beat the girls?  To hell with that.
  He pushed on.
Friendly fire 
  Understand what that means. It means walking in front of your dogs (the ones
you have left) and pulling  them along as you search for a stick with an
orange ribbon on top -- the only evidence that you are on the trail.
Meanwhile, the whipping snow leaves you blind, and the wind -- at a chill
factor of 70 below zero -- can rip the skin from your face. "I couldn't tell
what was up, down, sideways," Swenson recalled.
  But somehow, marker by marker, he made his way along the frozen flats and
into Topkok  Hill, pushing against the wind. He suffered frostbite. He was
exhausted. Push on. Push on. After hours of this he came upon a shelter cabin
on the far side of the hill. He poked the door open. And inside  was a
schoolteacher, sitting by a fire; his snowmobile had broken down.
  "Wasn't he shocked to see you?" I asked.
  "Nah," Swenson said. "He just nodded."
  Alaska.
  Which brings me to  an important point. The Iditarod, I have learned, is
not really about the $50,000 prize. And it's not really about the macho
boasting that will soon begin, now that Butcher has been toppled. No. This
race, first and foremost, is about Alaska.
  How can I explain this state? It is an attitude, a frame of mind, the
kind of thinking that makes men build cabins miles from nowhere, no water, no
electricity,  the kind of thinking that leads college graduates to abandon
creature comforts and hunt for food, the kind of thinking that climbs
mountains, hikes glaciers, welcomes strangers like family, teaches children
to cherish nature, treats Eskimos and Indians and white men like brothers.
  A quiet, simple, common sense. It's the kind of thinking that makes a
lost schoolteacher in a snow-covered cabin look up from the fire and simply
nod at a musher the whole state is looking for.
  It's also the kind of thinking that uses snow drifts as bathrooms.
  But it is magical. You can't deny that. Before  this race started, I asked
a rookie musher what he wanted from the Iditarod. He said, "The privilege of
seeing this land."  And you know what? He's  right. It is a privilege.
  If I learned anything  from two weeks in this state, it's that America is
lucky to call this place its own. You wander among  these snow-covered
mountains and frozen oceans and tall trees and rare animals and good,
old-fashioned,  terribly rare human kindness -- and you keep asking yourself,
"Does this really come with my passport?"
He was right on track 
  But enough mush. And back to the mushing. Hours after Swenson left that
cabin, he was alone again, lost in the wind, when suddenly a snowmobile
appeared, nearly running over his dogs.
  "WHERE'S THE TRAIL?(at)' Swenson yelled at the driver.
  "YOU'RE ON IT!"
  "WHAT  HAPPENED TO THE OTHERS BEHIND ME?"
  "THEY TURNED BACK."
  They turned back? Swenson felt a rush. It was enough to get him over the
hump and lead his team into Safety, the final checkpoint. There,  it was
confirmed: All the top mushers except Swiss-born Martin Buser were stuck at
White Mountain, 55 miles behind.  And Buser was lost. 
  "What did you think then?" Swenson was asked.
  "I  thought I just won the Iditarod," he said.
  And a few hours later, he had, the first five-time winner in Iditarod
history. Weather made this the most dramatic finish in years. And weather
surely cost Butcher her chance at a fifth championship. Despite an incredible
team, she finished third (Buser came in a few hours ahead of her), and her
reception, in the dark hours of the morning, was hardly  a hero's welcome --
maybe 50 people. A smattering of applause.
  She held her head up.
  "Turning back didn't lose me the race," she said. "I made the decision not
to continue. . . .  
  "Could  I have pushed my team more? Well, my whole strategy has always
revolved around dog care; the better you take care of them, the better they
perform. Maybe I could have popped a cork, got them to do it,  but I didn't
want to ruin their trust in the way I drive them."
  "Are you upset at losing?" someone asked.
  She wiped an icicle from her eyebrow. "I really wanted to win. It would
have been a  cute fairy tale. We (she  and husband David Monson) could have
hung up the harnesses and not raced Iditarod for a while. We want to start a
family. And I think, even with this, we're going to do that."
  She sniffed. Butcher takes a lot of heat for preferring dogs to people.
But here, for once, at the finish of a life- draining race, she talked about
children  over dogs. Nice.
  Meanwhile, back  at the bar. . . . 
  "How do you feel emotionally?" someone asked Swenson, who lives in Two
Rivers, Alaska, as he nursed his drink. He grinned. His eyes rolled.
  "I'm too brain dead to tell you."
Don't  eat the moose 
  Which about sums it up for me. I've learned many valuable lessons on this
Iditarod trail: 1) Never sleep next to snoring pilots. 2) Avoid showers
without doors.  3) Stay away from moose.  (In Unalakleet, a tiny village, they
had a dinner at the church: "Moose stew, all you can eat, five bucks." But I
passed. One of them might be watching from the window.)
  And 4) For those of you  who, upon hearing of  these brave dogs that run
through ice and snow, now feel you must take your lazy pet and sign him up at
Vic Tanny -- well, let me say this. Before the race, I interviewed Joe Runyan,
 one of the best mushers in the business. He raises sled dogs at  his kennel,
dozens and dozens of top racing prospects. 
  "Let me ask you something," I said. "And answer me honestly."
  "OK,"  he said.
  "Can any of your dogs fetch a bone?"
  "Uh, no," he said.
  So there.
  As for the race, well, let's remember that it's not over, that even as
you  read this, some of the 75  mushers who started this thing are still
working  their way across Alaska, from one little village to the next, with no
hope of  prize money, only the sense of accomplishment. 
  And that is enough.  More than enough. They give an award to the last
musher to arrive. It's called the Red Lantern. And right now, the leading
candidate is none other than Bill Peele, the 55-year-old North Carolina
businessman  who traded money against his retirement to try this race just
once before he died. He was almost disqualified after one of his dogs ran away
in the Alaska Mountains.  He had to tie up his team and go searching. Not
finding that dog could have cost Peele a $30,000 investment and a year's worth
of training. But as he set off that day, there were tears in his eyes -- for
the animal.
  "If something  should happen to him . . . " Peele said, breaking up. "I
just gotta find that dog. . . . "
  He did. He's still in the race. Back of the pack.
  We'll leave the light on for ya, Bill.
  Me?  I leave Alaska with a certain sense of gain -- and loss. Mostly, my
butt is sore from sitting in Old Jim's plane for so long. All those stops. All
those wonderful scenes. There's a song they wrote about  this race, a playful
little ditty that I heard a group of schoolchildren perform along the way:
  "Oh, give me a team and a goodly dog
  and a sled that's built so fine
  and let me race those  miles to Nome
  One thousand forty-nine,
  And when I get back to my home 
  Hey, I can tell my tale
  I did, I did, I did the Iditarod trail."
  And I did.
  Now. 
  Where's the  bed?
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<DISCLAIMER>

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<KEYWORDS>
END; DOG; RACING
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