After college, Jurek moved to Seattle, Washington, and began to compete in western trail ultras against some of the best trail ultrarunners in the country. He consistently would finish in the top three and some wins started to come in 50Ks and 50-mile trail races. Winning thrilled him, but he wanted to push his boundaries and explore his potential. After setting the course record at Minnesota Voyageur, he wanted to step up and run a 100-mile race – the 1998 Angeles Crest 100 in California. He placed second with 19:05:35 against stiff competition, including Tarahumara runners. He wrote, “I had almost won my first 100-miler. Now I knew I could run this distance. I knew I could win too. But few others knew it. It was my little secret.”
At age 25, Jurek set his sights on Western States 100, the race that had the most fame in the sport. As he put it, he wanted to use the race to prove to Northern Californians and the rest of the elite ultrarunners that he was worthy to be in their fraternity. The proof came, and the secret was out when Jurek, called a “flatlander” by some competition, won the 1999 Western States 100 in 17:34:22, dethroning five-time winner Tim Twietmeyer, of Auburn, who came in second. Jurek became only the second non-California runner to win the iconic race. He showed great joy at the finished, did barrel rolls across the finish line, kissed the track and jumped up, yelling “Minnesota, Minnesota.” His win as a first-timer at Western States shocked many, along with his successful strategy to lead from start to finish. Jurek said, “I went out hard and fast because that’s the only way you can try to beat people like Tim.” He went on to win Western States seven straight years.
In 2005, just two weeks after winning Western States 100 again, he followed that up by testing his speed and endurance on the roads by running in the hot and tough Badwater 135, across Death Valley to the Mt. Whitney portal. He won in course record time, 24:36:08, breaking the record by 85 minutes, and was the first to do a back-to-back Western States and Badwater within two weeks. He also won there the following year.
A few months later, in 2006, he traveled to Greece to run in the 153-mile Spartathlon road race from Athens to Sparta to compete against some of the finest ultrarunners in the world. There were 292 starters from 34 countries. He surprised the international world and became the first American to win the race. His time of 22:52:18 was only second to the legendary Yiannis Kouros’ times when he won Spartathlon four times. Jurek won Spartathlon in impressive fashion for the next three years, each time by more than an hour ahead of the second place runner.
After a DNF at hist first Hardrock 100 attempt in 2000, Jurek returned in 2007, spending a month in Silverton, Colorado, to acclimatize and train for the race at altitude. Unfortunately, he sprained his ankle two nights before the race but still started the tough mountainous course in the San Juan Mountains in Colorado. He toughed it out, and the ankle eventually went numb. He won in course-record time of 26:08:34.
During his ultrarunning career, Jurek had at least 34 overall wins that included ten course records. His last known ultra finish came at age of 39, in 2013. PRs: marathon – 2:38, 50K – 3:04, 50 Miles – 5:50, 100K – 7:28, 100 Miles – 15:36 (Western States 100), 24 Hours – 165.7 miles.
Congratulations to Scott Jurek. Visit the American Ultrarunning Hall of Fame to read about the past inductees.