Stealing 2nd!
Pho-tog-ra-pher (n) 1. One who practices photography 2. one obsessed with capturing life with their camera. 3. One who eats, sleeps and breathes photographs. 4. One who sees the world in 4x6.
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As sports photos, these don't work very well. They're too loosely framed, they're from the wrong side (you want faces, not backsides) and the angle is bad. It is exceedingly difficult to make good sports photos from the stands at a baseball game. With great seats you can still do it.
If you are interested in PHOTOGRAPHING baseball I suggest trying to do so at a rec-league level. You'll be able to get much closer, get lower and can actually learn and practice proper techniques. Being a major league baseball fan and photographing baseball are two different things.
For example, no one will confuse this boy with a major leaguer - but it makes for a more interesting photograph and allows one to actually practice technique. A big part of sports photography is location - you need to be in the proper location. As a fan in the stands, that's very difficult.
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Trust me, the pitcher is acutely aware of him stealing. It's Mike Trout, of all people. The pitcher knows that he has to pitch the ball at some point, and Trout is just too fast for most MLB catchers.
I have to agree that it's an uninteresting sequence, honestly. I'd be more interested if you got the sequence of an attempted throw to second from the catcher to get Trout out. Although, he's so fast, I'm not sure if there was even an attempt to throw him out.
Shooting sports actions is all about faces, getting the ball in the shot, and a peak moment of action. Being in the right location is crucial to getting all of these in the shot. As John said, get closer if you can. Practice on t-ball or coach-pitch games where you can get close. Anyone can do what you did from the stands - all it took was mashing the shutter button. But knowing WHEN to mash the button, with the right settings, location, lens and composition makes you a sports photographer.
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I try to remember "FACT' when taking sports photos - Face, Action, Contact, Toy (ball, stick..). Get all four in one shot - winner, 3 out of 4 good too.
But does it always have to be that way? These are only guidelines only to me.
Phil
"You don't take a photograph, you make it." ~Ansel Adams
Phil
Yep - it's just a guideline. sometimes there's just something so unique and interesting about a shot the rules don't apply. But this is basic baseball - especially at the major leagues. Sometimes a shot from behind is interesting - I really like this shot because there's something about him pulling away - that pull away and the finger are what make the shot for me (although I wish I had captured more of the player falling away) - I mean the kids were 11 years old:
Great example.
"You don't take a photograph, you make it." ~Ansel Adams
Phil