Aaagogo wrote in post #5358487
I'm starting to realize that many beginner sports shooters, including myself always wants to try to include the ball... but I've and am slowly changing my opinion of getting the ball in the image. While capturing the ball is nice, but more often than not, the image becomes loose... IMO, so now, I want more of facial expressions and action shots, rather than ball shots.
Getting the ball in frame and being loose do not necessarily go hand in hand and you can get facial expressions AND the ball if your timing is good. Here are some samples (only to illustrate my points):
and
and even:
And here's a little looser one from across the net, shooting into the far court:
And I have a ton more just like these - all tight and all with ball.
Catching the ball in frame is all about timing and practice. Shooting loose will increase the odds if your timing is not good, but it will end up with a shot that is way too loose. Shoot tight and with both eyes open and time the shot. You want to be right in the grill with your images.
The shots above were all taken at the highest of pro level, with a 400mm lens, shot from within 5 feet of the court. I have used the 70-200 from courtside, but most of the time I end up zoomed all the way in at 200mm.
For the most part, you want shots of players' faces; not the sides. Yeah, the ball isn't required, but it
IS a nice thing to have for action shots.
Some follow through shots won't have the ball in frame:
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And then there are the jube shots like this:
But in both of these, you want again to be tight on the emotion and facial expression of the player.
Rarely will serves yield compelling images, especially when shot from the side. Get as low as possible to clean up the backgrounds.:
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And, you're specifically NOT supposed to fire the shutter until AFTER the ball toss.
On serves, sometimes it's best to shoot from behind the end line to get the player's face - even bring a ladder to get above the fence at the back of the court:
And I don't even know what shot number 5 is all about. It almost looks like a frame where you accidentally hit the shutter.
Your shots are OK. The shots other than number 5 show good timing, but are a little soft IMO. Might be due to low shutter speed and might be due to bad AF. Since you didn't post your EXIF, I'm not sure where your shutter speeds were. Here's what I was able to pull off one of your images: Lens Focal Length (mm): 70; ISO: 800; Aperture: 2.8; Shutter: 1/400. Bump your ISO to 1600 which would get your shutter speed up to 1/800s. Yeah, you'll get a little more noise, but this will increase the sharpness of your images. Deal with the noise in post processing.
Also, unless you're shooting a forehand return from across the net, or a few other isolated situations, I'd suggest shooting vertical and not horizontal.
Hope this helps.