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Ref Butts and Slam Dunks: What It's Like Photographing an NBA Game

43 点作者 PaulHoule大约 2 个月前

5 条评论

briandear大约 1 个月前
I photographed NBA and Final Four (among other sports for Reuters, and occasionally Sports Illustrated) in the late 1990s and don’t recall their ever being 60 photographers on the court, but back in those days, we’d have film runners that would get our film from courtside and run it up to a makeshift processing room then scan the negatives on their suitcase-sized scanners and terminals that communicated over a modem. It could take 20 minutes to transmit a single photo. I started at 18 as an assistant to the Reuters staffer, but quickly got promoted to shooting rather than running. Crazy to be 18 and right there for key moments of some of the biggest American sports of that era.<p>Also, some of us would be allowed to set up photo strobes in the rafters which would provide a flash that would let us shoot on 100 ISO film. The majors would each have four strobes in the rafters and we’d also set up remote triggered cameras behind the backboard and sometimes aiming down from the rafters. Interestingly, despite far better technology, the quality of the “moments” photographers have captured hasn’t really improved much. Most of us didn’t trust the autofocus and did everything manually. For Reuters, even something that was slightly soft focused would never make the cut. It was either perfect, or it didn’t ship.<p>I remember when the AP started testing these gargantuan Kodak digital cameras that were essentially these modified Nikons. They were novel but the quality wasn’t good enough for the magazines.<p>Fun times.<p>If anyone is interested my photo of the San Antonio Spurs’s Sean Elliot was one of Sports Illustrated’s All Time Clutch Shots. Sports photography (at Reuters at least,) was all about the reaction shot rather than peak action, but somehow that Sean Elliot shot still lives on even though photographically it wasn’t that interesting. But I was the only photographer to get the shot that night because all the other agencies got blocked. Unfortunately given those were the film days, I have no idea where all of my negatives are anymore.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.si.com&#x2F;nba&#x2F;2010&#x2F;05&#x2F;28&#x2F;28all-time-clutch-playoff-shots" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.si.com&#x2F;nba&#x2F;2010&#x2F;05&#x2F;28&#x2F;28all-time-clutch-playoff-...</a>
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brudgers大约 2 个月前
The big thing missing from the article is the strobes.<p>Flash is how pros get their pictures and there is a network of massive strobes that the photographic pool share. Same is true for most basketball arenas in the US.
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PaulRobinson大约 1 个月前
Used to know a guy who became a freelance sports photographer focusing on EPL games in Manchester. Paid better than his previous role as a writer for the local paper, but seemed much more challenging on various technical matters - you get all the issues covered in this article, but also you&#x27;re having to get to an outdoor game, in Manchester, in the middle of January. I&#x27;d meet him warming up in a city centre pub after the games, and it would take him hours to thaw out. Although the beer was decent in there, too...
mrandish大约 1 个月前
Related interesting fact (which I learned the hard way). Indoor volleyball is one of the hardest sports to photograph well. It shares many of the same technical challenges as indoor basketball but a hitter&#x27;s swing and subsequent ball speed are much faster.<p>As a fairly serious amateur photographer possessing the usual higher-end DSLRs and a backpack full of lenses, when our teen daughter showed interest and aptitude in competitive club volleyball, my wife asked &quot;Hey, with all that gear can you get some dramatic shots of her playing?&quot; &quot;Sure!&quot; I naively responded. I started to realize just how wrong I was when I tried to shoot the first game and largely failed to get shots that were A) at the right moment, B) not motion blurred, and C) in focus.<p>I was shocked. Only once I&#x27;d failed did I bother to look up &quot;Shooting Indoor Volleyball&quot; and discover posts from Olympic-level pro sports photographers commiserating about the unique challenges of indoor V-ball. There are two sets of interrelated problems that compound each other: technical and practical. The main technical problem is that a lot of indoor volleyball courts aren&#x27;t very well lit. Sure, they seem bright enough to the naked eye but freezing high-speed motion needs a lot of light to enable a fast shutter speed. And you need a long lens (ie a lot of zoom) because you can&#x27;t be right alongside the court due to line judges needing clear sight lines and the ever-present risk of players chasing an errant ball trampling you. Lenses that do all of that at high-quality and auto-focus quickly are big, heavy and <i>very</i> expensive. If indoor volleyball was outdoors, even on a cloudy day, there would be double the light and this would all be <i>much</i> easier.<p>The second set of problems are practical. There a 12 players on the court, six on a side in two rows of three. As you try to line up shots where the action is likely to happen you quickly discover that this configuration has players constantly moving in front of the shot zone you were aiming for. And this is where auto-focus becomes a real challenge as it will constantly be refocusing on the players moving into your frame in front of or behind the &#x27;shot zone&#x27;, which is empty because the hitter is winding up and still flying toward the shot zone where the hit will happen. Of course, you can also take the approach of picking a player and having the auto-focus stick to that player, except the whole goal of the ball setter and potential hitters is to hide which player is actually going to hit the ball for as long as possible. Oh, and there&#x27;s a grid of sharp black lines called &quot;the net&quot; just 20-inches away from your shot zone desperately trying to get your auto-focus to focus on it instead of the ball or hitter (neither of which are there yet).<p>I did ultimately manage to get enough good shots. My wife and daughter were pleased. I only managed to do this by shooting literally thousands of shots and spending hours reviewing shots to find the few keepers. Having a camera capable of shooting over 20 50 megapixel shots a second helps. I spent a fair bit of that time wishing my daughter had taken a liking to softball instead... :-)
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curtisszmania大约 1 个月前
Photographing an NBA game sounds like a mix of excitement and chaos—perfect capture moments amidst the action. Reminds me of launching a product; some days you hit the basket, others? Pass the ball around quickly! The challenge lies in staying adaptable and focused, even when the crowd is cheering or things get rocky. It&#x27;s all about passion and keeping your eye on the prize to drive forward, no matter what happens on the court—or in our case, in the lab or boardroom. Let’s keep shooting for greatness! -Curtis