How To Choose Lenses for Sports Photography – In Depth

You’ve seen sports photographers on the sidelines of every sports event – with massive lenses supported by monopods. You’ll see them there in almost any kind of weather… Waiting to capture a perfect moment – one that distils the essence of the sport, and that also captures the action, in a vital moment for the athletes involved.

The lenses selected for sports photography have a very specific function in helping them to capture these fleeting, and rare moments. Let’s look at those lenses and the real reasons why photographers choose to, (and need to) use these lenses. We will also look at why shorter focal length lenses are not appropriate for photographing sports events… I deal with all this, in the three sections of this article about Sports Photography.

In general, sports photographers choose to use long focal-length lenses with wide apertures. The specific focal length, and whether they choose a prime lens or a zoom lens may change based on which sport they are photographing, and where they’re taking photographs from.

In this article, I hope to help you understand why they make those choices as well as to provide you with some options for the best lenses to pick for sporting events.

What Properties Does a Sports Photographer Want in Their Lenses?

Sports photography equipment requirements can be distilled down to the following:

A Sports Photographer with Canon Camera and Telephoto Lens
by JanneM
  • Ability to capture fast-moving objects as if they were frozen in time… Frozen sharp, and with correct focus.
  • Fast reactions and adaptability (high shutter speeds, large apertures, and extremely fast focusing)
  • High sensitivity to changing scenarios (varied focus features, and optical image stabilisation)
  • Extreme Reliability in extreme conditions (it may be raining, snowing, or very dusty in the sports arena, but the lens must perform regardless of this)

Aren’t these attributes rather similar to the athletes that these photographers photograph?

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photographers on the sideline at an american football game
Photographers on the sidelines of an American Football Game, with telephoto lenses mounted on monopods

Focal Length Choice for Sports Photography

Michael Schumacher's Ferrari photographed with a telephoto lens
by elyuyu

Outdoor sports events usually call for telephoto or super-telephoto lenses; more often Super-telephoto than plain telephoto lenses are used in sports and action photography.

Super-telephoto lenses are generally lenses with a focal length of more than 300mm. These sports lenses would have to have large apertures to allow the photographer to capture images with fast shutter speeds and no additional lighting.

If you’ve ever tried photographing a soccer event you’ll know why these photographers use these lenses. A moderate telephoto lens of 70mm or 135mm will give you a rather wide view when photographing a player on the other side of the field and will show you almost nothing of interest if you’re photographing from near the opposite goal post.

Additionally, it’s usually difficult and/or dangerous to get too close to some of the action. Imagine having to sit 10 feet away from a racetrack to get frame-filling pictures of Formula 1 cars with a medium-length telephoto lens! Both dangerous and impractical… Yet, sports photographers may do this to get the shot.

Why Use Super-Telephoto Lenses?

600mm, 800mm, and 1,200mm lenses help magnify the players/drivers so that they fill up the frame and bring all the gritty action right up into the photograph. This is why a super-telephoto lens comes into play… To get you close to the action, even though you’re far away.

Also, if you want to capture the speed of the cars you can use a relatively slow shutter speed and pan your camera to blur the background; Impossible if you are too close.

Should I Use a Zoom or a Prime Lens for Sports?

While zoom lenses are often used for action shots, both prime and zoom lenses have a place in the sports photographer’s camera bag. Each type of sports photography lens gets used when appropriate.

The decision to use one over the other comes with experience, and with a developed style. Beginners will do well to pick zoom lenses over prime telephoto lenses, because they are easier to work with.

Why Use A Zoom Lens for Sports Photography?

Sports photographers have to deal with a constantly changing environment. Very often incidents occur so fast that it’s not possible to change a lens. Zoom lenses are invaluable at these times. Imagine being able to frame a racecar 200 feet away one moment and the next swivel around to take a photograph of a car crash happening 30 feet away and then a portrait of a distressed driver as he walks past you, all without having to change your lens once!

Sigma’s 50-500mm f/4-6.3 EX DG HSM Lens could enable you to do just that! In exchange for greater flexibility, you have to contend with a smaller (varying) aperture, which means a dimmer viewfinder image in a DSLR.

Why Use A Prime Lens for Sports Photography?

Super-telephoto lenses are very specialised lenses ranging in focal length from 400mm to 1200mm. Their optical design is very complicated. This is why you will find more prime lenses than zoom lenses at this end of the focal length spectrum.

Prime lenses offer superior image quality to zoom lenses because they are designed optimally for a particular focal length while zoom lenses strive to offer decent quality at all focal lengths.

Prime lenses also offer large apertures that are completely essential for freezing action. Large apertures also mean that the image in the viewfinder is brighter, helping photographers to see small objects and details better even if they are shooting at smaller apertures.

The image below here shows a Sports Photographer using the Canon EF 300mm f/2.8 L lens at the Dubai Tennis Open. It’s massive compared to an enthusiast or hobbyist-grade 300mm lens!

Photographer at the Dubai Tennis Open with a Canon EF 300mm f/2.8 L IS II lens.
Sports Photographer with the massive Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L Lens

Aperture Requirements for Sports Photography Lenses

Capturing fast movement in one great shot, frozen in time, means that often photographers will need shutter speeds that are 1/500, 1/1000 sec or higher. Most sports events are held in relatively well-lit areas during the day, but at night, even the brightest floodlights are a poor substitute for the sun. This means that sports photographers need to use fast telephoto primes that are often used at f/2.8 or so.

Sometimes, even in bright sunlight, the photographer may choose to use a large aperture to blur out the background. This keeps the action alone in focus, blurring out a distracting background. This separation of the sports action from a cluttered background is one of the defining features of large-aperture telephoto lenses, and one of the defining features of great sports action photography.

Lenses with larger apertures generally perform better at two levels, apart from letting in more light and allowing faster shutter speeds:

  1. They focus faster and more accurately, even in low light.
  2. They have a higher level of sharpness at their intermediate apertures.
A speeding BMW Car on a race track photographed with a clear background.
by hirevimaging

Sports Photography at Night

The sun may go down, the action may move indoors, or under lights, but the fun goes on. Sporting events continue late into the evenings and often are started at night when the atmosphere is cool or for primetime scheduling reasons.

Large apertures are even more important when it comes to night, and low-light situations. Light levels are bound to be lower while the action and movement still requires a fast shutter speed.

Of course, you may compensate by increasing your ISO settings, but not everyone is willing to pay for the trade-off with higher noise levels.

In this situation, larger apertures also offer the sports photographer an added advantage of a brighter image in the viewfinder, thus making it easier to get better framing and composition.

Today, mirrorless cameras with electronic viewfinders take the place of optical viewfinders, quite often. Extremely sensitive full-frame sensors like those on the Sony A7SIII (for video), make noise and image brightness less of a concern, but larger apertures are still critical to success in Sports Photography.

Image Stabilisation For Sports Photography Lenses

Image Stabilisation (IS), Vibration Reduction (VR), and Optical Steady Shot (OSS) are Canon’s, Nikon’s, and Sony’s terms for their proprietary shake and movement reduction technologies.

Many of their lenses are now equipped with these technologies, making it inevitable that we take a look at them. I’ll use the term ‘Shake Reduction’ to refer to these technologies though I prefer the term “Image Stabilisation”.

Shake Reduction technology can mean the difference between a razor-sharp and blurred picture at the same shutter speeds or the difference between the ability to hand-hold a lens for a photograph that would otherwise have to be tripod-mounted. These lenses are large and heavy; coupled with a full frame professional digital camera the combination can get quite heavy to hold perfectly still without support.

Some older lenses of this genre do not perform well on tripods and instead introduce shakes where there is none. Others have a panning mode for tripod-mounted use, and correct shake only on one axis.

Shake Reduction does not fix all your shake problems; rather, it helps you increase your efficiency. If used well, it can be used to really push the limits of hand-held photography.

Wide-Angle Lenses For Action Photography

A skateboarder photographed with a wide lens, with a city's skyline in the background.
by ElectrikCandyland

Wide-angle lenses are not practical for most live sports applications. However, if you’re photographing a relatively low-impact sport (where damage to the photographer is ‘relatively’ low in a worst-case scenario), say skateboarding or roller-blading for instance, you could use these lenses for great effects.

Most sports photographers will also make it a point to carry wide-angle zooms so that they can capture images that convey the environment, the location, and the audience at any sporting event. These are often as important as the sporting event itself.

Choose The Best Full-frame Lens For Sports Photography!

Here we have a list of some of the best lens choices for action and sports photography.

Canon RF Mirrorless Lenses for Sports (full-frame)

Sony FE Mirrorless Lenses for Sports (full-frame)

Nikon Z Mirrorless Lenses for Sports

Canon EF DSLR Lenses for Sports

Nikon DSLR Lenses for Sports

The above lists are suggestions, and the links are to affiliate sites where you can look up their specs, and make a purchase if you wish. Clicking the links does not add to your expense, but helps us to keep this site going. Do consider using these links if you want to support us.

You can also find out more about lenses for different kinds of photography at The Lens Buyer’s Guide post.

Susheel Chandradhas

Susheel Chandradhas

Susheel Chandradhas is a Product Photographer and Filmmaker based in India. He has been taking photographs (almost) all his life. He has a diploma and a bachelors degree in Visual Communication, where his classmates all believed that he would write a book on photography... Instead, he writes on this website (because - isn't a community more fun?).

His passions include photography, parkour, wide-angle lenses, blue skies, fire extinguishers, and fast computers.

In addition to writing for Beyond Photo Tips, Susheel is a staff writer for Fstoppers.com, and owns and runs ColoursAlive, a photography, and video production studio.

You can connect with Susheel on Twitter, Instagram, or LinkedIn.

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3 Comments

  1. What happened to the venerable Nikon 80-200mm f/2.8? That should be at the top of the list!

  2. @ Paul: Thank you for your encouraging comment. I appreciate it.

    @ Momentography: You’re right! Thank you for pointing out its exclusion. I’ve added it to the list.

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