I’m sure I’ll miss quite a bit here, but I thought some of you might benefit from insights if you’re looking to get into the professional side of Sports Photography. Here is my latest experience for a nationally ranked D1 Football Program.
Week before game: Receive email request to work the game. Work out details regarding media credentials, photo formats/size, frequency of shoot through email. Confirm spot in stadium media room for in-game processing. Client wants photos for media at arrival, each quarter, and post-game, and any major events immediately. 3x2 JPEGS only for in game, open to other crops following the game.
Day before game: Charge all batteries, clear all cards, pack up:
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Nikon z9 attached 70-200 f/2.8 for close-up work.
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Sony A1 attached 600 f/4 for cross-field work.
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Laptop for in-game processing. Portable mouse, charger, etc.
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Additional lenses in bag: Sony 400 f/2.8, Nikon 24-70 2.8, Sony 135 mm 1.8
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Two extra batteries for Sony (has the extended grip with 2 in). 1 extra Battery for z9.
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2 512gb CF-B’s for z9 in camera, two extras. 2 1920gb CF-A’s in camera for Sony, two extras.
Confirm upload location for in-game photos is live for the team’s media group.
Night Before Game: Lie awake debating 600 f/4 vs 400 2.8. I can’t decide this, so I use both in game.
Pre-Game: Arrive 3 hours early to set up in media room. Walk about a half mile from media parking carrying way too much stuff. Some people are smarter than I am and use pushcarts. Don’t drink too much water as bathroom breaks are few and far between.
Shooting begins, Capture:
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Team arrival off bus. Take about 200 photos. Head to media room pick 5, process and upload.
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Q1. Very early touchdown, run to media room, pick 2 photos, process upload. Return to field. 3 minutes before quarter ends, return to media room as opposing team is on offence. Process 5 photos, upload.
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Q2. More of the same. Lots of touchdowns in this one and lots of running back and forth to the media room.
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Halftime. Have a couple of minutes to breathe. Process 5-10 photos, upload, return to field 2 minutes before kick-off to catch team coming back on field.
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Q3. More of the same.
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Q4. More of the same.
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Postgame: My team wins. Photographing celebrations, walk-offs, fans, etc. Run to media room, send the best 5-10 of the postgame immediately. Start processing the other photos thereafter about 4 hours in total after processing. (I keep a notebook on a fly-fishing cable in game to write down the best photos of each set of shots to help this part speed up.)
Next Day:
- Receive call asking for player specific adds inside 1 hour. Provide 8 photos of the players.
Totals:
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8,000+ actual photos. The Z9 and A1 shoot exceptionally fast and I tend to be on the high side.
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100-120 finals provided.
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15,000 steps.
Overall: An absolute riot to shoot football this way IF you don’t mind chaos and crazy speed.
I ordered the 400 2.8 from Nikon at its release. Months later, they couldn’t ship or provide updates so I moved to Sony. Not sure if Nikon is better now. I actually shoot RAW to maintain more control of the light and run about 1-2 minutes per photo processing on the long side. If I’m particular about the shot and don’t have to crop I can run them in 30 seconds. This requires a super fast laptop that ran the same price as my cameras.