Nick Krug describes his view of charging Iowa State fan; Can Bill Self get to 1,000 wins?

photo by: Nick Krug

An Iowa State fan is restrained by police after charging at Kansas head coach Bill Self after the Jayhawks' 108-96 overtime win on Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

A few links for your snowy Tuesday …

photo by: Nick Krug

An Iowa State fan is restrained by police after charging at Kansas head coach Bill Self after the Jayhawks' 108-96 overtime win on Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

photo by: Nick Krug

An Iowa State fan is restrained by police after charging at Kansas head coach Bill Self after the Jayhawks' 108-96 overtime win on Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa.

A few minutes after Kansas’ 108-96 overtime victory over Iowa State on Monday, I went up to photographer Nick Krug to ask him if he’d seen the angry ISU fan that had rushed at KU coach Bill Self after the game before getting pushed back by a police officer.

As I was finishing my sentence, Nick pulled up the photos above on his computer.

Yep, that answered my question.

Anyways, some national outlets have started to pick up on the story and photos, including Deadspin and USA Today.

Self told KUsports.com’s Gary Bedore that the incident was not a big deal.

It was a great crowd. It was a great
game. I have no problem with what went
on after the game.

Here’s what Nick saw while shooting the photos above:

I noticed the fan charging Self about
the same time the police officer noticed him.
The fan got close up to Self
and was pointing his finger, appearing
furious while accusing Self of being classless.
My guess is it had to do with Elijah Johnson’s
dunk and being completely caught up in the
moment. The police officer quickly
got between Self and the fan, grabbed
his shirt, and removed him. Self
obviously noticed the fan, but he had
the presence of mind not to react while
letting the officer intervene.

• The following GIF is not how the incident went down, but it still is a funny fake re-enactment that was sent to me via Twitter by stevedoyel.

Though Self started later in coaching than many of the current wins leaders, he has a great chance of setting a new college basketball coaching wins mark if he decides to coach into his late 60s, according to this research a few weeks ago from Konza63 on RockChalk.com.

According to the study, if Self keeps up a pace similar to his recent win percentage and stays at KU, he could get to 1,000 wins sometime between his 65th and 67th birthday. For reference, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim is 72, while Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski is 66, and neither is at the 1,000-win mark. Coach K is closest with 951 career wins, and he started coaching at age 28.

ESPN’s Myron Medcalf wrote more about Johnson’s effort against ISU, saying the point guard handled criticism and through it all didn’t whine, blame others or quit.

And finally, here are the video highlights of the game from ESPN.