Wednesday, 10 July 2019

lens - Are there any cheap, fast lenses capable of highschool sports photography?



I recently took on my first paying client, and she is also into photgraphy. She usually does sports for her highschool yearbook. They just have an entry level Canon DSLR with a kit zoom on it that goes up to 200mm, but it's not very fast (f/4 or 5.6 or so). She told me that she has a tough time - especially at basketball games - getting shots with any kind of reasonable lighting, and has to do a lot of work in post just to get them reasonable.


This post on digitalphotomentor.com mentions the Cannon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM II for professional sports photographers. At $6k USD I suspect the yearbook won't be springing for that lens anytime soon.


So I was curious, are there any reasonable quality, fast lenses for Canon cameras that are lower priced (certainly no more than say, $1k)? I'd love to be able to point them to a couple of options. I assume the largest print they'd be making would be a full spread in the yearbook - maybe two 17"x11" (two 8.5" side by side)



Answer



The ideal lens in this situation is probably a 70-200 f/2.8L and the older Mark I USM (non-IS) version, might fall inside the price range on the used market. The lack of IS is less of an issue with sports, where your shutter speed is liable to be up and over 1/focal_length to freeze the action, anyway.


There are also three fast prime options you can consider, all of which are known for their sharpness and speedy autofocus performance.




  • The EF 85mm f/1.8 USM (nicknamed "Mr. Basketball" on the dpreview Canon lens forum because so many people want a cheap basketball lens)





  • The 85/1.8's identical cousin, the EF 100mm f/2 USM




  • The EF 135mm f/2L USM. As an L, it has better contrast and build quality, and 135 is the center of the 70-200 range.




However, the longer a prime, the more restrictive its framing can be on usage. I have a 135L, I shoot events with it all the time, but it can be frustrating not to have zooming capability, especially if your own mobility is restricted.


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