Star-studded crew to lead Iron Dog Ambassador Team to Nome

Exciting news coming from Iron Dog Race HQ today!

𝐏𝐑𝐄𝐒𝐒 𝐑𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐀𝐒𝐄: January 11, 2024 β€” Mike Vasser

7100 Old Seward Highway, Unit C, Anchorage, AK  99518

907-563-4414

Email: director@irondog.org

Website: Click here

Your 2024 Iron Dog Ambassador Class.

Anchorage, Alaska (January 11, 2024 ) – Iron Dog great Scott Davis and DeeDee Jonrowe, one of the most prominent figures in Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race history, headline a prestigious Ambassador Class Team to Nome during this year’s 40th running of the Iron Dog Race.  

The World’s Longest, Toughest Snowmobile Race is slated to leave Big Lake, Alaska, on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. The Pro Class start will be followed by the Expedition Class start. But, prior to the Pro and Expedition Class, a highly respected and talented group of Iron Dog Ambassador riders will travel the trail to Nome. 

In 2023, the Iron Dog Ambassador Team traveled the trail, spreading safety messages along the way. 

This year, Iron Dog Ambassador Team 99 will be traveling in celebration of our sport, and the unique traditions that Alaskans celebrate during winter.

Riders in the 2024 Team include:

Scott Davis, seven-time Iron Dog Race champion.  Scott raced the inaugural event in 1984, finishing second before capturing his first Iron Dog Race title in the second race in 1985 From 1984 through 2015, Scott missed just two races, both due to injury. With various partners, he started 29 races and finished 25 of them. In addition to those seven wins, he collected even more Top-10 finishes: eight second place, five third place, two fourth place and a handful of fifth places. Scott retired from Iron Dog Race in 2015, finishing in second place and was inducted into the Iron Dog Race Hall of Fame in 2017.

Cory Davis, 2017 Iron Dog Race champion. Cory is the son of Scott Davis; the two have raced in the Iron Dog only once together, in 2011, and finished in third place. Cory was instrumental in the Flying Iron β€œFreestyle Show,” which took place before the start of the Iron Dog Race in 2016 and 2017 in Anchorage, and in 2018 during the start on Big Lake. Davis, who is known for his wicked β€œwhip,” is a six-time X-Games medalist.

DeeDee Jonrowe, who is a two-time runner-up in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. Jonrowe has competed in the Iditarod 36 times, finishing on 32 occasions. In addition to two second-place finishes, she collected 16 Top-10 and nine Top-5 finishes. She was presented with the Leonhard Seppala Humanitarian Award twice and earned the Sportsmanship Award once during her professional career. She was voted twice by her peers as the Most Inspirational Musher, including in 2003 after crossing the finish line just three weeks after completing chemotherapy for breast cancer. DeeDee is a member of the Alaska Mushing Hall of Fame, the Anchorage Daily News Iditarod Hall of Fame, and the Alaska Women’s Hall of Fame.

Also on this year’s Ambassador team is Mike Jonrowe.  Mike, a longtime supporter of trail maintenance and grooming for dog sled teams and snowmachiners, has traveled to Nome casually four times.  A certified drone pilot, he will be capturing images of the group to share with fans. 

Robby Schachle, 2021 Iron Dog Race champion. Robby has raced in the Iron Dog Race seven times, finishing first, second, third, fourth and three DNFs. Robby comes from a family steeped in racing tradition. In his spare time Robby, along with family, put on the β€œBig Rob Schachle Memorial Fun Run,” in honor of his late father, to support the Big Lake Aurora Lions Club. 

Pat Reilly, who participated in the early days of Iron Dog Race, starting in the second-ever race in 1985.  With two Iron Dog Race runner-up trophies to his name, Reilly has been instrumental with the foundation of the Iron Dog Race. Reilly organized racers’ pilots who flew air support for teams for many years after racing, flying many races himself β€” most often with his wife, April. April was inducted into the Iron Dog Race Hall of Fame in 2009. The two of them owned and operated Rain Proof Roofing for more than 40 years.  

Ashley Wood, who in 2023 with partner Hillarie Gosset became the second all-woman team to ever finish the Iron Dog Pro-Class race, and the first to do so with the inclusion of the Red Dog Loop. Not since 2001 has another all-woman team completed the Iron Dog Race. Ashley participated in the 2015 and 2018 Pro Class fields, scratching due to mechanical issues, and in 2017 flew in support of teams. Ashley has a long history of racing wins, including multiple first-place finishes in the Valdez Mayor’s Cup, Big Lake 150 and Skwentna 200. 

Kristina Woolston, external affairs manager with Donlin Gold, a longtime sponsor of the Iron Dog and other iconic Alaskan traditions and events. Kristina also served for more than 10 years as vice president of government relations for Chenega Corp., and five years as vice president of external affairs for Quintillion. An Alaska Native, Kristina was raised in Naknek and earned a degree from Dartmouth College, putting herself though university by commercial fishing in Bristol Bay.

To support Team 99 during the 2024 race, or to sponsor this Iconic Alaskan event and ensure the tradition continues, please contact Iron Dog Executive Director Mike Vasser at director@irondog.org, or call 907-563-4414.

The Iron Dog began in 1984 as the β€œIron Dog Iditarod.” Today, 40 years later, it is known as The Iron Dog and spans more than 2,500 miles starting in Big Lake, traveling to Kotzebue with a halfway stop in Nome, before returning to Big Lake.