cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

EOS Rebel T3 Sports photos coming out blurry

ltdeleon
Contributor

I have athlete boys so I purchased a telephoto lens EF 75-300mm so that I could take lots of photos of them playing sports. Although a beginner, I started off really well and the pictures were great! We are way into our high school season and I have tried to take several pictures of my oldest who is a senior and I am so disappointed! The pictures are terrible! I don't know what happened, what I did, what I touched, but I can't seem to find the right setting and get those great shots I had once taken before. The only difference is that I am taking pictures in the evening at outdoor games. The pictures are extremely blurry. Sometimes they look great when I review them on my camera but I can't trust that view because I am not wearing my glasses. When I download the on to my computer to start viewing them, they are bad. I want to cry! It's his last year playing soccer and I have not been able to get any decent shots of him! I have changed the aperture, the ISO, the shutter speed and nothing works. I have never used a tripod, but when I started using the camera and telephoto lens, I held my camera in my hand and the pictures were great! Can anyone share some tips/help?!!! Thank you!

17 REPLIES 17

itdeleon,

Thanks for sharing your pictures.

Well, if you're up in the bleachers, you're not going to be able to use a tripod, bur you might be able to get away with a monopod. If you do get a tripod, try to get one with a removable leg.

I personally have a Geekoto, and one of the legs unscrews that you can then use as a monopod. I really think that would help in your situation.

In your nighttime photo, I think you have the exposure down right, and to me, it looks more like camera shake than motion blur of your subjects. With long focal lengths, the tiniest of movements will be exaggerated.

If your lens will only go down to f/4, you won't be able to use an f/2 aperture, but like I said, your exposure looks good.

Like kvbarkley suggested, put your camera in Tv mode. Set your speed between 1/500 and 1/1000 to freeze the action. Your camera will set your aperture for you. You can either use Auto ISO and let your camera set the ISO, or you can do it manually yourself. Take a couple of test shots and either lower or raise the ISO to your desired brightness.

You're on the right track.

Steve Thomas

Thank you so much! Unfortunately Mother Nature decided to drench the fields and we had to postpone the game to a later date but we have another one tomorrow and hoping I can use all these great suggestions! Appreciate it very much 😎

Hello, Itdeleon!

Unfortunately, it looks like you are approaching the limits of your gear. IIRC, the T3 ISO maxes at 6400 and you are halfway there with the blurry example you provided and noise generally increases from there. It is blurry because your shutter is too slow for the action (see attached). You may be able to raise your ISO or even max it out, but that may or may not be acceptable or even get your shutter speed to where it needs to be. All you can do is try and see if the shots are acceptable to you.

T3 Soccer EXIF-1.jpg

Newton

Thank you very much for your suggestions and feedback!

wq9nsc
Elite
Elite

A tripod isn't going to help with this type of blur because the shutter speed needed to freeze soccer player motion (1/1000 or better preferred, 1/800 fairly usable, 1/640 will result in a fair amount of blur) is far faster than needed to avoid blur caused by camera shake. 

Typical high school soccer fields are not brightly illuminated so, like HS football, it is a sport that requires a wide aperture lens.  I believe your current lens wide open is f5.6 at the telephoto end and even with a really good high end camera body, a f5.6 lens would make things difficult to get fast enough shutter speed while keeping the ISO reasonable.  A body that handles low light well and a wide aperture lens are both critical to night sports in high school but the lens is the most critical and if you decide to upgrade, that is the direction to go first.

It will be limiting but at night your best bet is to get as close to the action as possible on the best illuminated portion of the field and keep your lens within its focal length range where f4 aperture is available.  Try experimenting with 1/800, 1/640, and maybe as low as 1/500 (although this is going to introduce some major motion blur from player speed) to see what works best for you.  Unfortunately high school sports is actually more demanding of equipment than D1 college or pro-level because at those venues the level of illumination is much higher. 

Example photos below were shot on an average HS field using f2.8 lenses (70-200 f2.8 and 400 f2.8) with a pair of 1DX III bodies at 1/1,000 shutter speed with the lens wide open.  This resulted in ISO 10,000 for all except the second photo which was in a relatively bright spot at ISO 5,000.  In daylight or on a well illuminated pitch, a f5.6 lens will do fine but not so much in the dark.  The fifth photo was at an afternoon match and I shot this game using my EF 200-400 f4 with integrated f1.4 extender; the last photo was captured while I was at the opposite goal with the extender switched in resulting in a 533mm f5.6 lens but due to plenty of daylight ISO wasn't an issue.

Rodger

1DX III EF 70-200 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 10,0001DX III EF 70-200 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 10,0001DX III EF70-200 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 50001DX III EF70-200 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 50001DX III EF 400 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 10,0001DX III EF 400 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 10,0001DX III EF 400 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 10,0001DX III EF 400 f2.8 1/1000 f2.8 ISO 10,000

1DX III EF 200-400 f4 with 1.4X extender engaged1DX III EF 200-400 f4 with 1.4X extender engaged

EOS 1DX M3, 1DX M2, 1DX, 5DS R, M6 Mark II, 1D M2, EOS 650 (film), many lenses, XF400 video

That's a lot of $$$$ right there in lenses! These shots are awesome! Thank you so much for sharing your photos and suggestions.

Ron888
Enthusiast

As others have said i various ways, sports photography is hard. Basically your problem is a too low shutter speed for the night shots.
It may be that the highest ISO still doesnt allow a high enough shutter speed.Sorry ,you've reached the camera's limit.A better lens and/or camera will help but just be aware there are no miracles in the sports photography game.Even pros with the expensive gear can have kinda grainy pics and a low keeper rate😮
However there is one small positive: You'll get some nicely blurred shots that work.For example If their faces are sharp but limbs are moving, that can make a cool arty shot 😃

Will try different options different ISO, will try to get closer to the field as well when I can. Thank you for your input, appreciate it.

Announcements