PixelMagic wrote in post #16680268
Sorry but your technique is all wrong.
For basketball you need a shutter speed of 1/640 or higher to freeze action (this assumes you aren't shooting with strobes). The best approach would be to shoot with your camera in Manual mode, open your lens to its widest aperture, then adjust the ISO to give you 1/640 to 1/800 shutter speed. In most high school gyms you'd need f/1.8 or f/2.0 to get the required shutter speed without pushing ISO too high but if lighting is sufficient you can get away with an f/2.8 lens.
Shooting in sports mode wouldn't help (try not to use the auto settings on the camera) and neither will shooting at f/8 since this will require you to use an extremely high ISO. Also sports photos are usually shot in portrait orientation unless you have a compelling reason to shoot in landscape orientation. Check sports magazines and online forums; you will soon notice that the majority of sports photos are in portrait orientation.
This! Wide aperture, high shutter speed and the lowest ISO that will let you accomplish the first two.
Also, I like to shoot in portrait orientation and tighter from the sides and the corners of the base line. Sometimes, I will get down low to the floor on the baseline next to the basket with a wider angle lens and shoot up towards the basket.
Also, the wider aperture will blur the background helping you separate the players from the crowd (or whatever) in the background.
2 Canon 1Dx's | Canon R6 | EF 70-200 F2.8 L IS II | Canon 300mm F2.8 I | EF 24-70mm f/2.8L II USM | Canon Extender EF 2x III | Canon Extender EF 1.4x III | Editing of photos is okay.
Doc's Shots
USMMcNeese72 Flickr Page