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It was Holmes’ fourth consecutive Kobuk 440 win, and fifth overall.
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“It's kind of the unknown, I don't know what to expect,” Kevin Hansen said. “I haven't gone more than the 440, which is what, three, four days on the trail.”
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Connection to mushing history of region keeps participants coming back
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The Kobuk 440 is set to begin on the ice in front of Kotzebue on Thursday. Thirteen mushers and their teams are signed up for the mid-distance race, which runs along the Kobuk River.
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Returning this year are Kotzebue locals Jim Bourquin and Kevin Hansen, Paul Hansen’s son. Jessi Downey, a fan favorite from last year with family ties to the Northwest Arctic community of Noatak, will also be racing and competing against her boyfriend, Hunter Keefe.
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Rookie musher Jessi Downey spent part of her childhood in the Northwest Arctic and was the only Iñupiaq woman in the race. In fact, she might be just the second Iñupiaq woman musher in the race’s more than 30-year history.
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This year's winner, Cantwell-based musher Jessie Holmes, arrived in Kotzebue a little after 8 a.m. Sunday, three hours ahead of second-place finisher Richie Diehl of Aniak.
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As the only team to complete the original upper Kobuk loop trail through the storm, 38-year-old Ryan Redington took home the $16,000 first prize.
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Many teams were pinned down by the weather for hours, unable to find each other and unsure if they were on the trail at all.
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While Browning was first back in Kotzebue, a race champion has yet to be named: Race officials still must adjust teams’ times to account for different distances traveled during the weekend’s harrowing storm.