Hobo & Larry lead the team after Zorro gets pneumonia.
|
LANCE MACKEY WINS THE IDITAROD:
by Jon Little
He was wiped out physically but not mentally. He was his usual talkative self and spent the next hour fielding questions, seated and eating at a table where someone delivered a steak dinner. But before he'd talked more than a minute or two, a familiar white-haired man strode up to the stage - Dick Mackey, Lance's father and his inspiration not just to race but also to have the will to win. The two met in a wordless hug. "Do you realize what you've done?" the elder Mackey asked. "Yeah, I've won a new truck," his son said, wiping back some tears, and sending laughter rippling through the packed room. I Lance Mackey revealed that the old, loose-fitting wool sweater he wears whenever he races is one his father wore when he raced. It's his lucky sweater, he said, but the tattered garment probably now will become mantelpiece material, like his lucky bib 13.
Zorro is more than just a dog to Mackey. The dark, shaggy 8-year-old is the heart of Mackey's program. He is the father, uncle or cousin of every dog on his team. More than that, he's a buddy of Mackey's, which was obvious to anyone who saw the 2007 Iditarod leader sweet-talk the dog. "I want to thank the veterinarians for having Zorro cared for," he said. "I worried the whole run here." Zorro just needed to end his race at White Mountain and is doing fine, Mackey said a day later. Regarding his dogs in general, Mackey said they all fit his two requirements: happy attitude and hearty appetite. "I'm already looking forward to next year," he said. "I feel it is one of the steadiest, most willing-to-please teams. They'll do anything for me. That's exactly the reason why I'm here in the position I am. It took a little something extra to beat the people I did."
"I'm a kind of person who just goes with the flow," he said. "My motto is do whatever it takes to get the job done. If I set a schedule, then something will go wrong. You gotta just go with the flow and wing it." [excerpted from: Cabela's, our favorite site.]
Special
Thanks To:
|



t turned out that Dick Mackey had been on a flight to Nome that
was delayed; he called Iditarod Race Director Joanne Potts to let
her know he wouldn't be there to see his son. Potts knew that
wouldn't do. She told him to wait five minutes and call her back.
When he did, she'd somehow arranged for him to jump on another
flight, and the airline had agreed to pull his bags out of the other
plane. Dick Mackey and his luggage showed up a few minutes too late
to see his son's team finish, but not too late for the celebration.
Seconds later, Mackey brought up something that obviously was on
his mind. He'd dropped one of his main dogs, Zorro, at White
Mountain with canine pneumonia. When race veterinarians noticed the
dog's temperature was a little high and he had a slight cough, they
brought him indoors, into the community building that serves as the
checkpoint. Mackey had arrived in the wee hours of the night, 1:38
a.m., and the chief veterinarian there spent the rest of the night
seated on a small wooden chair keeping an eye on Zorro to monitor
his condition.
Asked what his race plan has been, Mackey said he had one, but it
had been pretty vague, which fits with what he told me during the
race and with what I've seen of him over the years. He excels at
taking what he has been given, and either overcoming adversity or
turning events to his advantage.