Two Kilians. One Sport. Completely Different Definitions of Impossible.

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Kilian jornet vs kilian kort endurance trail mountain running zen mountain

If you follow trail running closely enough, you’ll know there’s a name that keeps appearing at the top of results sheets, on FKT boards, and in conversations about the greatest mountain athletes of all time. That name is Kilian.

What you might not know is that there are two of them — and together, they represent the full spectrum of what this sport can ask of a human body.

Kilian Jornet — The Mountain GOAT

At 38 years old, Kilian Jornet holds the joint male record for the most UTMB victories with four wins in 2008, 2009, 2011 and 2022, tied with France’s François D’Haene. This year, he has the chance to break that deadlock alone.

His 2026 schedule is deliberately focused: Western States, Sierre-Zinal, and UTMB — three of trail running’s most prestigious events, all within a two-month window.  At Sierre-Zinal alone, he has won ten times — including a 2024 victory by less than two seconds over the defending champion. 

What makes Jornet extraordinary is not just the winning. In the past two years his main goals have been long mountaineering projects — Alpine Connections in 2024 and States of Elevation in 2025, where he summited every accessible 14,000-foot peak in the contiguous US by running or cycling between them. Racing, for Jornet, is almost the straightforward part.

Kilian Korth — The 200-Mile Specialist

If Jornet represents the ceiling of speed and mountain mastery, Kilian Korth represents something else entirely — the outer edge of what the human mind can endure when the body wants to stop.

In 2025, Korth accomplished one of the most demanding feats in modern ultrarunning: winning the Ultra Trail Triple Crown of 200s in a single year — the Bigfoot 200, Tahoe 200, and Moab 240. He not only swept all three but shattered the previous combined record, finishing with a total time of 156:30:20, breaking the previous mark of 162:00:51.

What makes Korth’s story compelling is his radical honesty about who he is as an athlete. “I’m not elite level fast,” he has said openly. “I can’t compete with someone like Kilian Jornet in a 50K to 100-mile race — but that’s not my forte. My mental strength comes much more into play in 200-mile races.”

Korth won the Bigfoot 200 not by being the fastest runner on course, but by being the most efficient at aid stations — spending a maximum of twelve minutes at each of the twelve stops. While his moving pace was slower than the runner-up, his transitions gave him the overall win.

That is a masterclass in racing smarter, not just harder.

A former collegiate swimmer, Korth credits his intense hours in the pool as a foundation for the mental fortitude that 200-mile racing demands — waking at 3:30am for training, logging four hours a day in the water. The discipline transferred. Only the medium changed.

Two Kilians. One Question.

They occupy different ends of the same sport. Jornet is chasing speed, history, and a record that would stand alone. Korth is chasing the edge of human endurance over distances most people can’t conceive of running.

Neither defines the other. Both expand what we think is possible.

That’s trail running at its best — a sport wide enough to hold both of them, and generous enough to celebrate both equally.


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