NOME – Jessie Holmes raced into Nome early Friday, winning his first Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race on the longest trail ever.
The 43-year-old musher and his team of 10 dogs were escorted by a convoy of police cars down Front Street in Nome. The team, led by Polar and Hercules, ran under the arch at 2:55 a.m. in temperatures hovering around zero degrees, to hundreds of cheering fans.
“It’s hard to put into words, but it’s a magical feeling,” Holmes said.
He’s been waiting for this moment for years.
“I have nothing to stop smiling about,” he said. “I have everything going for me. And, you know, I shouldn’t ever feel a down moment in my life. If I died tomorrow, I’d just die the happiest man.”
Holmes walked down his line of dogs, petting them and giving them steaks. He jumped into the crowd to hug fans and shake hands. He praised his team.
“I’m really proud of these dogs. I love them,” he said. “And they did it. They deserve all the credit.”
Matt Faubion
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Alaska Public Media
Race officials presented Holmes with a check for $57,200.
Longest Iditarod trail ever
Holmes, who’s originally from Alabama, lives in Interior Alaska, where he says he works as a carpenter. He starred on the reality TV show “Life Below Zero.”
This is Holmes’ eighth Iditarod race. He has placed in the top 10 nearly every year, as high as third, and won Rookie of the Year in 2018.
He notched his first Iditarod victory in 10 days, 14 hours and 55 minutes — the longest time it’s taken a winner to finish the race in over two decades.
“Those are 10 quality days, I got my money’s worth,” Holmes said at the finish, laughing.
This year’s mushers were racing on the longest Iditarod trail in history, at an estimated 1,128 miles. The route is normally closer to a thousand miles, but scarce snow in Southcentral Alaska forced race officials to move the trail north at the last minute. It’s the fourth time the race has started in Fairbanks, and it’s a change that climate specialist Rick Thoman expects will likely have to happen more often in a warming climate.
Holmes said he soaked in every minute of this year’s race — “the lows, the highs, the in-betweens.”
“It’s not about this moment now,” he said at the finish line, “it’s about all those moments along the trail, you know, being up in the Blueberry Hills, and the most amazing sunset you could ever imagine, moon shimmering on the glazed snow and the northern lights.”
He said he also thought about prior Iditarod champions as his team traveled across Alaska, including the late four-time winner Lance Mackey.
“Just wanted to join that club with them,” he said. “And, you know, I’ve wanted that for a long time. It’s unreal.”




Matt Faubion
/
Alaska Public Media
A game of leapfrog
This year’s race was a game of leapfrog between Holmes, Matt Hall and Paige Drobny, who were all chasing their first Iditarod win.
“They’re awesome competitors,” Holmes said. “And, you know, I never once thought I had this thing until we made it over Cape Nome.”
All three mushers live not too far from one another in the Interior and all three have come close to winning before — Drobny placing as high as fifth in her prior Iditarods and Hall was last year’s runner-up.
Holmes said he and Hall have been friends for decades. The two met in Eagle, a village on the Yukon River, where they worked Hall’s father’s trapline.
At one point when they saw each other on the trail this year, Holmes said he yelled out.
“I go, ‘Man, 16 years ago, in Eagle. Can you believe this?’ Like, here we are, we’re leading the Iditarod and, like, it was a real cool moment between us,” Holmes said.
Holmes came back out to the finish chute Friday morning as Hall and his 10 dogs dashed in right before 6 a.m to secure second place for the second year in a row. Holmes and Hall shook hands. Dozens of people cheered on Hall, including his wife, Elke.




Matt Faubion
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Alaska Public Media
Hall’s team was led by his dogs Dyea and Qivik, who he called the perfect pair to lead him into Nome. Dyea, he said, is “just this rock star, push-button leader.”
“He’ll do anything,” Hall said. “I can steer him right around, park him wherever we want to. And then for this race, Qivik, the one running next to him up there, was a little speed demon.”




Matt Faubion
/
Alaska Public Media
Drobny commanded the lead of the race early on, dashing into Galena, near race mile 369, in first place. As the race went on, she, Holmes and Hall passed each other on the trail, trading the first-place spot.
In the race’s final quarter, Hall briefly held the lead over Holmes out of Koyuk, but Holmes stole it back.
Tough trail conditions
It was not only the longer trail that led to this year’s slower race, but also tough trail conditions.
Mushers slogged through sections of soft snow and were even hit by a sandstorm early on. Further up the trail, between Kaltag and Eagle Island, frozen snowmachine tracks made for some of the worst trail conditions Drobny had ever seen, describing it as “70 miles of crap.” Mushers then faced strong headwinds heading up the coast.
Hall was raised on the Yukon River, which much of the trail followed. Still, he said, the trail this year went on for too long. It included a loop on the Yukon River that felt endless.
“Oh no, more Yukon, and more and more,” Hall said, laughing as he recounted the trail at the finish. “And then we got to go back on it again.”




Matt Faubion
/
Alaska Public Media.
Also notable about this year’s Iditarod: It was not only the longest trail, but the starting race field was also tied with the smallest ever with just 33 mushers.
Eight mushers have dropped out of the race, including one musher because his dog died. Two rookies were withdrawn Wednesday because officials said they were going to slow.
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