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Mission Accomplished: Moore Claims Quest Win

Mark Gillet
/
Junglemoon Productions/Suitcase Media

Fairbanks, AK - A light snow fell on a small crowd gathered on the Chena River in Fairbanks as Allen Moore’s eleven-dog team pulled the musher across the Yukon Quest finish line early this morning.  The win is fitting after a narrow miss last year.

Moore stepped off his runners, checked in his mandatory gear and greeted his wife, 2000 Yukon Quest champion, Aliy Zirkle. “How you doin’ baby?" she called and leaned in for a kiss. "Fantastic! Ready to do it again,” smiled Moore. 

After losing by 26 seconds to Hugh Neff last year, the Two-Rivers musher built himself an ultralight sled.  The bag is made from material used for sails on competitive sail boats.  He also trained his dogs repeatedly on the run between the last checkpoint and the finish line.  “You know it was a pretty good motivator.  You can stay motivated after losing by 26 seconds.  That’s the good thing about it.”

Moore and Hugh Neff chased each other for nearly the entire race this year.  Moore finally dropped his competiton at Mile 101 and the two didn’t see each other again until they took a mandatory eight hour layover at Two Rivers, the last checkpoint on the trail. 

Credit Mark Gillet / Junglemoon Productions/Suitcase Media
/
Junglemoon Productions/Suitcase Media
Hugh Neff placed second, but took home Dawson gold in this year's race.

Roughly an hour after Moore finished, Hugh Neff drove nine dogs across the line. It’s his 13th Quest finish.  In the team was Walter, a nine-year old sled dog who has finished six Yukon Quests and three Iditarods.
Yeah, this is Walter’s last race, he’s getting up there.  He’s a couch potato.  He’s with me every day.”

Neff will keep four ounces of gold he won after pulling in first at Dawson City, the race’s halfway point,.  It’s valued at nearly seven-thousand dollars.  That’s in addition to a second place prize of more than 13-thousand dollars. Allen Moore will take home a little more than 18-thousand dollars.  Moore finished in 8 days, 18 hours and 57 minutes.  It’s a new fast time, but with a reroute that cost the race a climb over American Summit and slashed 50 miles from the total distance, it will be recorded in the history books with an asterisk.