Happy July 4th. Oh and Some Baseball
Took a trip up north as part of my July 4th weekend. It’s technically time off, but I’m shooting a fastpitch softball tournament this weekend. We decided to cover a junior all-star game between Show Low and Holbrook, in Arizona. The lighting, as is typical for night youth baseball, was atrocious. But you work with what you have. I actually didn’t intend to shoot, but ended up grabbing a 1D mk2 and a 300 2.8 IS, shooting at 3200 ISO all night. Because I hadn’t intended to shoot, I got to second shoot the game from 3rd base. When we cover a game with 2 people, we each have assignments. 1st base shooter really has to deal with the batters (since most are righties), plays at third, and anything facing them, like lefty pitchers.
3rd base shooter has it easier, dealing with only the left batters (on average 1-2 out of 9 batters), and spending the rest of the time dedicated to covering plays at 2nd, plays facing them, and baserunners. So, when you’re covering a lefty batter, with a man on 1st, and only one out, you see the double play waiting to happen. You also see the runner at first taking a huge lead. You see the defense tighten up, and the pitcher slows his routine. It’s all anticipation at this point. So where do you point the camera? You have to cover the batter, but you have to be ready to catch a runner trying to steal before or during the pitch. If you wait til after a hit, you know have to see if the defense tries to turn a double play, and if the runner can break that double play up by sliding hard. So how do I manage to do all this? Prefocusing. What’s that, you ask? Read on. [Read more →]
