Top 20, Sorlie, and Brooks
As of Noon Thursday we have almost 30 mushers in, but there are still about 30 still left on the trail.
Our top twenty consisted of the usual suspects, the Smyth brothers Ramey and Cim, Hugh Neff, Hans Gatt, Aaron Burmeister, and Jessie Royer coming in 22nd. Jason Barron came in 14th, he was definitely hoping to better this year, describing last year’s eighth place finish as a “competitive camping trip”. Jason’s dad John Barron has ran Iditarod 26 times, never with a win. Rookie of the year contender Sigrid Ekran got into Nome in 21st position.
Sorlie arrives.
Robert Sorlie may have come in this year in 12th place, but like any true Iditarod Champion, he is always looking forward to next time. Sorlie has the best record out of any other Iditarod musher this decade, he finished 9th his rookie year in 2002 and he won the race the next year, and won again next time he won in 2005. Coming into the race I knew the field was competitive, but I almost expected Sorlie to win, thats what he does. Maybe it was the trail, maybe it was the puppy team, or maybe it just wasn’t Robert’s year. Coming in looking tired, and a man of few words Sorlie told the media that he was happy to be in Nome. Sorlie is part of a three person team from Norway which also includes Kjetil Backen, and Sorlie’s nephew Bjornar Andersen, however Robert is the musher who runs Iditarod most often and has the best record. Backen came close to winning in 2004, a year that Sorlie took off, however after the death of a dog just outside Unalakleet Kjetil lost his lead, but still managed to finish in 3rd place. Bjornar ran as a rookie in 2005 and was rookie of the year after his 4th place finish, in 2006 he was the sole representation for team Norway, and finished in a strong 6th place. You can hear an archive of Sorlie’s live finish at the bottom of this post.
Ramy Brooks Dog Death
Checking into Saftey is usually just a formality, mushers pick up their bib here and get ready for the final 2 or 3 hour trip into Nome. But this year for Ramy Brooks was different. On the trail from White Mountain one of Brook’s dogs died. When he got to Safety and told the officials, everyone agreed he should take the dog into Nome with him to the trail committee could do a full investigation. I went out to Cape Nome on snowmachine and saw Ramy come in, he did look tired but there wasn’t anything out of the ordinary about his run. We went down to the finish line to announce his arrival and for the first few minutes things went as usual. Ramy arrived, hugged friends and family, fed his dogs and answered a few questions from the media. But then he was quickly rushed out of the chute and what normally is about 15 minutes of hugs, media questions, and official checking in, was only 5-7 minutes and Ramy never signed in. After Brooks left the chute Race Marshall Mark Nordman told the media that Brooks had a dog die along the way and wouldn’t be checked in until the cause of death could be determined. Nominally, if that had happened at a checkpoint the musher would be held there until they were released. Ramey went from a 11th place finish to a 15th.  Brooks comes from another historic mushing family and has been behind a sled pretty much his entire life. Even at 15th this year is quite an improvement from Ramy’s worst finish ever last year when he came in 31st. He finished second in 2002 and 2003, and has finished in the top ten four other times since he started running the Iditarod in 1994. Brooks is one of those guys who will win someday, he has great skill and a strong team, he is just waiting for the year when everything will go right.
Posted in Iditarod 2007, Iditarod Coverage, On Location, Podcasts



March 20th, 2007 at 10:18 am
I’m concerned about the disqualification of Ramy Brooks. If it is true that he was found to have hit his dogs with a trail marker, why isn’t he disqualified from further races? At least a suspension for the upcoming couple of years. Too many people protest this as a “Cruel” race. I DO NOT AGREE, but how do I defend the race when mushers are found to be harming their dogs? I just feel as though mushers like Dee Dee, Lance, Jeff, Martin, etc. treat their dogs with love and respect, Ramy should be learning from them, not beating his dogs.