The Last Great Race has gotten a little less great as this year it's allowing "assisted" teams of wealthy trail-and-tribal donors to run alongside the real mushers. Cool, they're adding, substantially, to the winner's pot, and have made contributions to the native settlements along the trail, and they're not eligible for prize money or to even to qualify in the standings. Their main purpose, as I see it, is as a potential source of human protein in case other mushers and their team get stranded.
But the official Iditarod standings today, the first full day since yesterday's start, has "Expedition class" billionaire Kjell Rokke in first place. Another "Expedition class" racer, Thomas Wærner, the 2020 Iditarod champion, is assisting Rokke and was actually the first to arrive at the Finger Lake checkpoint, 123 miles from the starting line, beating Rokke by a minute. However, Rokke was the first to leave, a minute ahead of Wærner, and has the "lead." Neither team has rested so far.
If it's any consolation, the third "Expedition class" racer, Steve Curtis, is dead last, having just left Yentna, only the second checkpoint on the trail.
Okay, enough Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. The real leader right now is Paige Drobney, who left Finger Lake without rest about 2½ hours ahead of 2025 champion Jessie Holmes, who took a four-hour rest before leaving. As of right now, Drobney and Holmes are the only "official" teams out of Finger Lakes.
Ten other teams (Michelle Phillips, Bailey Vitello, Ryan Redington, Riley Dyche, Jessie Royer, Peter Kaiser, Kevin Hansen, Jason Mackey, Jody Potts-Joseph, and "rookie" Brenda Mackey) are currently in Finger Lake. Even though she was in the 2022 and 2025 Iditarod races, Brenda Mackey is racing as a rookie since she had to scratch both times and hasn't yet completed thee trail.
So far, all the teams other than Curtis have made it through Moose Alley, the 100 mile or so stretch between Willow and Skwentna. In 2024, Dallas Seavey had to shoot and kill a moose that got entangled with his dog team.
After Finger Lake, the trail clings to the side of a heavily forested incline along the narrow Happy River Gorge for 30 difficult miles to Rainy Pass on Puntilla Lake. From Rainy Pass, the trial continues up past the tree line and over the divide of the Alaska Range, and then descends down into the Alaska Interior.
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