Father, son face off in Iditarod sprint finish

The top three teams in this year’s Iditarod have pulled into White Mountain, the final big stop along the trail.

The first team to pull into the second to last checkpoint on the 1,000-mile trail was Dallas Seavey’s.

Dallas Seavey said there was a point on the Yukon River when he wondered if he was even still in contention for a top finish.

Dallas Seavey, pictured here in Galena, is racing his father Mitch for the Iditarod title. (Photo by Zach Hughes/KSKA)
Dallas Seavey, pictured here in Galena, is racing his father Mitch for the Iditarod title. (Photo by Zach Hughes/KSKA)

“There was a time in this race where I thought I had a small market share when it comes to who had a chance at winning this thing,” Dallas Seavey said.

Seavey said he was looking over his shoulder all night on the roughly 75-mile run from Koyuk. He anticipates doing the same on his way to Nome.

“It’s a habit, I can’t help it. I’ve been surprised too many times. You’re watching for one team and another team pops up out of somewhere,” Dallas Seavey said.

About 40 minutes later, Dallas Seavey’s father, Mitch drove his dog team into White Mountain. He smiled widely at the idea of racing against his son.

“I don’t mean it as a cliché, but I have two chances to win. I’d a lot rather win myself and I’m gonna do everything I can. I’ll give him nothing of free, including dogs or a college education,” Mitch Seavey said.

Mitch Seavey also knows it will be hard to make up the time he needs to catch his son’s team.

“… makes it fun, makes it very cool to be here both of us. Unless there’s a big earthquake one of us is going to win,” Mitch Seavey said.

Dallas and Mitch Seavey, pictured here in Koyuk, will race for the 2016 Iditarod title. (Photo by Emily Schwing/KNOM)
Dallas and Mitch Seavey, pictured here in Koyuk, will race for the 2016 Iditarod title. (Photo by Emily Schwing/KNOM)

A big earthquake–or something like it–is exactly what Brent Sass needs. He’s currently poised to finish in a solid third place, but he does have an outside chance to finish even higher.

“With what it is now, I have to have a spectacular run and they have to have something go wrong, that’s basically what has to happen at this point but anything is possible,” Sass said.

Regardless of the time gap, Sass says he won’t stop racing until his team passes under the burled arch.

“Oh no! I mean they’re still sitting here. They haven’t left yet and I’m not that far behind and I have been going back and forth with them for the last few hundred miles, so you can’t ever give up, that’s for sure,” Sass said.

The next 77 miles will be some of the most competitive in this year’s race. Whether they are some of the most competitive miles mushed in the race’s history won’t be decided until teams reach Nome.

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