Editor's Blog: Rik Shares His Sports-Photography Tips (with Photos)
Posted 04/23/2007 at 7:59pm
| by Rik Myslewski

My elder daughter's rugby team just landed a spot in the national collegiate championship Final Four, so it'll soon be time for me to again break out my trusty Nikon D70 and try to capture the perfect sports shot.
No, I'm not an expert photographer - not by a long shot - but I have learned a couple of things in the past three years of sports photography that you might be interested in hearing. And as a bonus, I've dolled up the following pages with photos of beautiful women: the Stanford University Women's Rugby Team.
Get the Right Equipment
This is, of course, in the "well, duh..." category - but what exactly is the right equipment?
The right camera: First of all, a digital SLR is highly, highly recommended (today I found Nikon D70 bodies going for under $400 on eBay). Get a digital camera because you're going to be shooting a lot of images, and digital photography make a 200-photograph day affordable. And an SLR gives you the ability to swap lenses, which brings me to my next point...
The right lens: A "long" (aka telephoto) lens is also highly, highly recommended. Good ones cost an arm and a leg, but since I live on an editor's salary, I picked up a relatively inexpensive Nikon 70-300mm 1:4-5.6 G lens for less than $150; I've seen them on eBay for around $120. It's not a world-beater of a lens, but I'm not a world-beater of a photographer. It suits me fine.
If you're stuck with a point-and-shoot camera, get an inexpensive teleconverter for it to increase its lens' focal length. In fact, if you're shooting baseball, with its long distances and lack of easy close-up access, you might consider a teleconverter for your SLR, as well.
The right accessories: To keep you camera's precious lens protected, you gotta get a UV filter. They're only twenty or thirty bucks, and they'll keep your lens from getting scratched when that middle linebacker comes crashing into you.
I always carry extra batteries and an extra storage card - even though I can shoot around 250 images on my D70's 1GB CompactFlash card, I often fill it up in the course of a game. Finally - and this may sound silly, but it's saved this hypercaucasian more than once - pack a tube of sunblock in your camera bag. You won't regret it.
More...