Ask Steve Bang what he won at the latest extreme triathlon heâs finished, and heâs likely to give you a funny look.
It's a look a disbelief, like you just couldnât understand even if he told you.
Itâs a look that says, âYou know nothing, Jon Snow,â Ygritteâs catch phrase to her beau all through the hit HBO series âGame Of Thrones.â
Despite the look, Bang will still probably tell you that he came home with a T-shirt and hat from his latest event, the X-Out Extreme Triathlon in Montenegro, Spain.
But the hat and T-shirt are definitely not why the 55-year-old Riverton swim coach and retired surgeon runs any of these extreme races.
Extreme triathlons are an emerging subset of the Ironman-style triathlons that typically involve a 3.8 kilometer swim (2.4 miles), a 180K bike ride (112 miles) and a full 26.2-mile marathon run. Extreme triathlons, though, also typically feature remote, austere environments that can be deadly.
Think jelly fish-infested waters that would normally cancel most other triathlon races and youâve got the right idea. Itâs about doing the extreme in extreme conditions.
Itâs the danger and the difficulty of these races that are the real prizes for Bang. The chance to say, âI did it. I did this and itâs an incredible feat that only a few people in the world can do.â
âBack in the day, when I first started this about 13 years ago, (Ironman) races were really a lot more, I guess, extreme,â Bang told Cowboy State Daily. âThey would do things like mass swim starts, which was more like combat swimming. And just over the years, theyâve kind of made it a kinder, gentler experience as a whole.â
That doesnât mean it isnât still a tremendous feat to complete one, Bang is quick to say.
âBut I was just looking for a little something more to rekindle the fire,â he said. âAnd thatâs when I got queued into the Extreme Triathlon Co.â
Extreme triathletes have taken grueling, austere and potentially deadly as their racing badge of honor.
In fact, participants all sign a three-page waiver that details the ways a person might die during the race. And, if thatâs not enough discouragement, the race manual actually starts with: âThis race is not for you. We do not recommend you do this.â
Bang doesnât even read the disclaimers anymore. He laughs at the idea a race isnât for him.
He knows the event is extreme and that anything can happen, up to and including death. Thatâs the feature heâs looking for.
So, he skips all the disclaimer stuff. He just signs on the dotted line and pays his $600 entry fee.
Biting Off More Than He Can Chew
Preparing for a race like the X-Out Extreme Triathlon is definitely not for beginners, and Bang doesnât recommend inexperienced triathletes do what he did when he first started doing triathlons.
He and a pal, who he was setting up a medical practice with, had been running a yearly marathon together. When the friend mentioned he was going to do a triathlon, Bang didnât think twice.
âI was on my way out to where he was, which was in Maine at the time,â Bang said. âAnd so, I just went online and said, âOh hey, this looks kind of neat.â And so, I just signed up for it not knowing what I was getting into.â
As a coach, this isnât what he recommends.
âUsually, people start with a shorter distance of triathlon, because they do come in various distances,â Bang said. âWhat I signed up for was a half Ironman.â
Pretty quickly into that first race, Bang realized that he was not as prepared for the distances involved as heâd thought.
If he were advising athletes, heâd recommend a sprint triathlon first to get prepared.
âIt doesnât have quite the distances built into it,â Bang said. âBut it allows you to move through the transitions and go through all the motions.â
Bang admitted he might have had an inkling he was in over his head on that first half Ironman while preparing for the race.
âYou figure it out in your head ahead of time that, âOh yeah, these distances are pretty big,ââ Bang said. âBut it doesnât really become a reality until youâre out there. And so, I did think about it as I was preparing for it, but it really hit home when I was on the run during the event.â
As grueling as that race was, though, Bang made it through. Not only that, but he also made it through determined to see what else he could do.
âThe cool thing about triathlon is, if you just keep going, you discover what your potential really is,â Bang said. âAnd you discover that in all events, actually, that our mind gives out far before our physical capabilities ever do. If you can just get over that, then your body can just keep going.â
Beating The Executionerâs Axe
To spice up the X-Out Extreme Triathlon in Montenegro for television viewers, the race included an unusual element.
It had an actual executioner whose job was to single out the slowest participants in the race.
For the race, Bang and the other participants were escorted to an island in the Adriatic Sea that used to be a prison but is now a luxury hotel.
This Alcatraz-like location has a helipad to bring VIP guests to the island. Standing in that helipad was a very important guest. The executioner.
âHe was just standing in the middle, looking at everybody, not saying anything, having an espresso,â Bang said. âAnd our indication to start the race was just a simple gesture with his staff. Thatâs what was supposed to tell us all to take off toward the beach.â
So that's what they did, running like death himself was at their heels. Which, he kind of was.
âI donât do well with cold these days,â Bang said. âFortunately, this wasnât as cold as a Celtman, which is more like 53 degrees where this was 56 or so.â
The Celtman is the Scottish Highlands version of the X-Tri, while the Norseman is held in the icy fjords of Norway and the Swissman is in the rugged Alps.
The swim was almost uneventful, except, unlike many other Triathlon races, there were just 29 participants. That made it hard for Bang to keep track of whether he was swimming in the right direction, to shore rather than out to sea.
If he guessed wrong, he knew that the executioner was waiting to eliminate the slowest five racers.
âI did get a little bit uptight that maybe I was off course,â Bang said. âFor a while there I was swimming pretty much alone.â
Eventually, though, he could see the beach, and he could see other competitors who had beaten him to shore. But he wasnât among the last five, and so wasn't chosen for elimination.
Biking 4,000 Feet Uphill Both Ways
Biking was next, and thatâs usually a strength for Bang. But heâs heavy for a triathlete at 180 pounds, and this particular race included climbing 4,000 feet in elevation with only one short burst of downhill.
The first 1,000 feet of climb, Bang felt he was not doing too bad.
The rolling hills gave him some brief respite, but didnât last for long before they came to the next portion â 6 miles of climb called the Kotor Serpentine, which raises 3,000 feet in height with no downhill portions at all.
It was while he was slogging through that â think doing single-leg squats with every revolution of the bicycle wheels â that Bang had a pretty close call with the executioner, or so he thought.
The executioner came along, riding on a motorbike past all the riders.
âI was biking along and I looked over beside me and there he was on a moped, and he was playing the part quite well,â Bang said. âAs he passed me he gave me this icy stare the entire time he passed by. So I was thinking, âOh no, Iâm being executed.ââ
Pedal To The Metal
That put the pedal to the metal for Bang, who was relived to find out that he was not being executed after all.
Once at the top of this grueling bike race, there was no real break. The athletes quickly tugged on their running shoes and started running on the trail, which was, thankfully, at least downhill. For a little way.
âI was able to make up quite a bit of time for that 4-mile, 3,000-foot downhill,â Bang said. âI did encounter a herd of goats on the way down who were right on the trail, so that was interesting.â
Then it was back to another 3,000-foot climb. But Bang was feeling pretty good at this point because it wasnât a switchback climb.
âIt was just a straight up trail that goes through a ravine and a bunch of boulder scree and whatnot, all the way to the top.â
Bang was thinking that this wasnât really a lot of elevation here, so he should probably jog a little bit.
âSo, I started to do that, and just as I did, I wasnât paying attention,â Bang said. âI caught my toe, and I went face first into the dirt.â
Bang lost a little time there, and he got passed by the current X-Tri female world champion.
âI was OK with that because sheâs an awesome athlete,â Bang said. âBut about 800 yards from the finish, I had run out of fluids and nutrition.â
That might not sound like a long way, but at the elevation Bang was at, and with the incline being what it was, this was actually a huge challenge.
âI was reduced to a bear crawl,â Bang said. âGrasping at whatever boulders or clumps of vegetation â often thorny â to pull my trashed legs to the next foothold.â
During that he was passed by others two or three times.
âBut I was OK with it at that point. Iâd already reached my goal, which was just to not get passed by the executioner and finish the race,â he said.

That Finish Line Feeling
The finish was something unique in Bangâs experience, because there were only the people who were part of the race, plus the organizer and support crew. And, the executioner, of course.
âUsually at finish lines, thereâs a lot of fanfare and a lot of people and what not,â Bang said. âThis was just very intimate.â
That didnât take away at all, however, from the feeling Bang got knowing heâd just become the American record holder for the Extreme X-Out Triathlon.
âBecause, you know, if you donât show up, then I canât race you,â Bang said. âAnd I was the only American there.â
And that is what Bang really lives for when it comes to these races. Itâs the finish that counts.
âThat finish line feeling is extremely addictive,â he said.
There are health benefits too, Bang said.
âBut I live by the creed of, do the things that scare you a little bit,â he said. âSo I seek out those things. Life and growth happen just outside of your comfort zone. And so, thatâs why I do it.â
The other thing, Bang said, is that those who donât make time for health in their life, will see health taking time away from their life.
âSo, for me, this has just become a way of life,â he said.
Those who want to see Bang racing and having the time of his life in Montenegro, should watch for the U.S. broadcast sometime this summer.
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.







