For sled dog-racing fans worldwide, the most important calendar day is
the first Saturday in March, when teams convene for the start of
mushing's Superbowl--the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race(R). Every year, as
it has since 1973, this ultimate challenge begins in the state's most
populated city, Anchorage, and then dives into the Alaska Bush on a
historic trail that wends over mountain ranges, along frozen rivers, and
onto the Bering Sea ice. The finish line lies 1,000-plus miles away in
Nome, beneath a giant, burled archway. There, dogs and their drivers are
greeted by masses of locals, vacationing fans, officials, media, and
other mushers who intimately know what that team has just endured. To
simply finish is the goal for entrants; to win is the accomplishment of
a rare few. Indeed, more people have climbed Mount Everest than have
finished the Iditarod(R).