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It was early this morning Alaska time At 1:11am when Jeff King passed under the burled arch in Nome, to become the fourth musher ever to reach four career wins in the Iditarod. King won previous races in 1993, 1996 and 1998. Following right behind Jeff into Nome is Doug Swingley, one of the other 3 mushers who currently hold 4 wins along with Martin Buser, and retired musher Susan Butcher. Swingley, who was leading for almost the entire first half of the race, and in a close second for the remainder was hoping to win his fifth career title, which would have tied Rick Swenson with the most Iditarod wins ever.

King finished the race in 9 days 11 hours and 36 minutes. It all started with 87 mushers back in Anchorage on Saturday March 4th. To date, 11 mushers have dropped out of the race since the beginning, including award wining children’s author, Gary Paulsen. The Iditarod Sled dog race, currently in its 34th year runs over 1000 miles from Alaska’s largest city of Anchorage to one of the state’s oldest and most historic gold mining towns, Nome.

There is a battle going on for the rest of the top ten spots in the race, DeeDee Jonrowe will be battleing Paul Gebhardt for third place leaving White Mountian just under 30 minutes of each other. John Baker and Bjornar Andersen also left the last major checkpoint of the race within an hour of each other.

Just because the winning musher came in doesn’t mean that the race is over, there are still over 70 mushers on the trail, and for most of them even coming in with a top twenty finish was never an objective, they were here for one reason…to compete with nature, and to compete with themselves, and to simply get to Nome.

For audio of the finish from KICY radio in Nome, Alaska listen here click here (approx 14.meg)

ALSO: Look for photos straight from the finishline arriving sometime in the morning!

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