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Rondy sprint mushing purse could reach $75,000 UPSWING:
While Iditarod winnings shrink, Rondy has bumped its money
payout. By KEVIN KLOTT kklott@adn.com Published: December
23rd, 2008 11:46 PM
In a year of global economic
downturns and companies feeling a financial pinch, some
Anchorage businessmen have pulled out their wallets and
helped revive Alaska's most historic sport.
The Fur Rendezvous Open World
Championship will offer the richest purse in the sport come
February -- and one of its biggest ever. A minimum of $65,000
has been set, said Susan Duck, executive director of the
city's annual winter festival.
That's up $15,000 from last
season's purse -- and it could grow to $75,000 by February
when mushers burst from the corner of Fifth Avenue and D
Street for Fur Rondy's marquee event.
If it hits $75,000, Duck said,
the purse will match the largest payoff in the history of
a race that started in 1946. And by next winter, she said,
it could balloon to six figures.
That's a significant revitalization
for an event facing its own recession two years ago. The
entire Fur Rondy festival faced extinction because of a
$110,000 debt. It closed its retail office and downsized
its staff.
"We're in a much better
position now," Duck said.
The upgrade comes while the purse of the
world's biggest sled dog race, the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog
Race, is facing a sharp reduction of its purse from $900,000
to perhaps as little as $660,000 -- or 27 percent.
Asked what it took to collect such a historic
Rondy purse, Duck said, "Blood, sweat and tears."
And some financial backing from Anchorage
businessmen Troy Smith of Hotwire Electric, Jack Powers
of Tudor Road Bingo Center and Dave Gransbury of the Ulu
Factory.
Proceeds from Fur Rondy's K-9 Crew and Paws
to Recycle program also will contribute to the purse, which
has had its ups and downs since 1993.
After reaching $75,000 that year, the purse
dropped to $65,000 in 1994, and plummeted to $35,000 the
following year.
Recent years have seen less-dramatic bounces:
• 2008: $50,000
• 2007: $33,000
• 2006: race canceled
• 2005: $60,000
• 2004: $40,000
• 2003: race canceled
• 2002: $60,000
The purse sank to its lowest amount the
year Willow's Egil Ellis won his first of four Fur Rondy
titles in 1999. He pocketed only $4,800 from a $20,000 purse,
which was down $30,000 from the prior year.
"We were basically running for free
that year," Ellis said.
Even so, $4,800 was a pile of cash for the
28-year-old musher who moved to Alaska from Sweden, where
purses didn't exist for sprint races.
"Just trophies and glory," said
Ellis, now 38 and training for his eighth Fur Rondy race.
"I'd run Fur Rondy even if the purse was $5,000."
Considering mushing is Ellis' full-time
job, he said it's good news for him that Greater Anchorage
Inc. officials have boosted the purse.
"We're seeing the results of their
hard work," he said.
Depending on how fast his dogs run, Ellis
could be in the hunt for $8,450, the winner's share of a
$65,000 purse.
There are bonuses for placing in the top
three of each of the three heats, so if a musher were to
win all three days, the total payout would be $12,350. While
huge by sprint mushing standards, the 22nd place finisher
in last year's Iditarod earned more.
Still, that kind of money would thrill the
Streeper family.
"We're looking forward to Rondy,"
said Terry Streeper by phone from Canada where it was minus
25 last week.
Terry is the father of three-time Fur Rondy
champion Blayne "Buddy" Streeper and the brother
of two-time winner "Fast Eddy" Streeper.
The Streepers normally don't make the long
haul from their Fort Nelson, British Columbia, kennel to
Anchorage until Fur Rondy. But this year, Terry said his
son will race the Alaskan Sled Dog & Racing Association's
ExxonMobil Open (Feb. 7-8) and Raven Electric Championship
(Feb. 13-15) at Tozier Track off Tudor Road to gear up for
the big race.
He said the $65,000 purse lured the Streepers
to Alaska early.
"It's a real positive for the sport,"
said Terry, who raced Fur Rondy during the 1990s, an era
he calls "the good old days."
Despite the spiraling economy, he argued
that this season might signal a new era. For years, sprint
mushing was the top dog until long-distance mushing -- particularly
Iditarod and Yukon Quest -- took over as the major sponsored
races.
As far as money, distance mushing still
rules. The Iditarod winner will earn $69,000 and a new pickup,
while the Quest champion gets $35,000 of a $200,000 purse.
But Duck is hoping a bigger payday for top
Fur Rondy racers will get sprint mushing back to "the
good old days."
"Sprint racing has been neglected,"
she said. "(But now) people want to be part of Fur
Rondy."
Find Kevin Klott online at adn.com/contact/kklott
or call 257-4335. |