SMU Basketball In The National Spotlight

SMU is in the middle of a remarkable season right now. Looks like Hall of Fame head coach Larry Brown has his program where SMU alumni and fans prayed they would be. I wrote more about this here: Game Changer.

In my last blog post I wrote about wanting to shooting a basketball game with a 70-200mm f/2.8L. Well, I got my hands on one and the results were pretty great. That lens is pretty much as versatile as can be for a basketball game. With the 200mm range I was able to capture shots across the court with some crispness. The only other lens I've seen with more versatility than the 70-200 is the 28-300mm f3.5-5.6L. Unfortunately, though, because the lens' widest aperture is 3.5 it's probably best to only use that lens if you have access to strobes in the arena.

I feel like I got some decent variety from this game, but I'm realizing that I can do a better job of capturing detail shots. I saw a great example of this here on Exposure.Co by the Clemson University athletic department on gameday. 

Our Only Pope

Whenever you spend time around a team you start to learn a lot about the players you see on the field. In the last two seasons I've been covering SMU football one of the guys who's stood out to me the most is Kevin Pope (3). He is currently SMU's starting inside linebacker and team captain--he is the leader of team. But what makes his story intriguing is that he is in his fifth season with the Mustangs after being granted an extra year of eligibility due to an injury he suffered earlier in his collegiate career and it just so happens that this is one of SMU's worst seasons on record, who are currently winless. It's such a shame for a player of Pope's caliber, who will do anything for his team and he proved that when he played running back in the beginning of the season because his team needed help at that position. After moving back to linebacker and having a great game, I spoke to his coach about the kind of athlete and man Pope is. 

This is a story I originally wrote for Central Track

The SMU Mustangs lost their seventh game of the season on Saturday to the Memphis Tigers, a conference foe, 10-48. 

Yup, it was bad.

Worse, the loss officially eliminated the team from being bowl-eligible, and insured the Mustangs of finishing with a losing record.

There's no denying this has been a terrible season for the Mustangs all around, and the near-empty Ford Stadium in the second half on Saturday proved that this team has lost what little remained of its support. The product on the field isn't pretty, and, statistically, SMU is the worst team in the FBS. SMU is the only winless team in the country, ranks last in scoring offense and scoring defense, last in total defense and second to last in total offense. 

Yikes.

A season like this was definitely not what senior Kevin Pope envisioned for his team heading into the season. After missing the 2010 and 2011 seasons due to injury and earning a medical waiver, Pope is in his fifth and final year with the Mustangs -- and he undoubtedly didn't want to end his collegiate career this way. 

Last season, Pope led the team with 91 tackles from the linebacker position. After several injuries at running back, Pope then started getting carries at that position as well, while still keeping up his defensive duties on the other side of the ball. Coming into this season, he earned the No. 1 running back position, but with the paralyzing struggles the offense has had thus far -- including a four-way round-robin quarterback shuffle -- interim head coach Tom Mason thought Pope would be more valuable to his team if he returned to his linebacker role for the rest of the season. 

Last week against Cincinnati, in his first action at linebacker this season, Pope stepped in and recorded seven tackles. This weekend against Memphis, he led the team with 12 tackles and also recorded a sack. 

"You gotta love that kid," Interim head coach Tom Mason said. "I wish I had 20 of him. We wouldn't be sitting here talking about problems if I had 20 kids like Kevin Pope."

In the second half of this week's game, after things were already way out of hand, starting running back Prescott Line was on the sideline having an ankle injury attended to. And after backup running back Luke Seeker sustained a huge hit, it appeared as if Pope was lobbying for some carries. Still, Mason stuck to his plan of keeping Pope on defense only. 

"Kevin is one of those kids," Mason said. "He'd go both ways. He'd take 90 snaps on defense and 70 snaps on offense and he'd go down in heat exhaustion. That's the kind of kid he is."

For a senior who was fortunate enough to play college football for one more year, his effort has shown gratitude this season. He's certainly leaving it all on the field. 

"I just want to bring a different mentality toward the defense and go out there and just be a vocal leader and help them play better," Pope said when asked about his efforts this season. "I just want to go out there and play as hard as I can and spark the defense."

To his credit, the losing season hasn't affected Pope or his play on the field. For now, the team's lone bright spot is only concerned with going out every play and giving it his all.

Looking For Variety & Action

This weekend I shot the Battle For The Iron Skillet, the annual meeting between Dallas-Fort Worth rivals SMU and TCU. As is the case with every event I shoot my aim is to allow the photos to tell the story. 

But with this quest I'm consistently looking for lots of variety and action shots. Looking at my football photos from the past year I have far too many shots of quarterbacks in the pocket and ball carriers getting up after a tackle. Essentially I missed the play because I was too focused on following the ball but usually end up reacting to a throw too slowly and ended up missing the catch and or tackle. 

This year, I've made it a point to focus less on the quarterback and predict the action more. This method has led to greater action shots. Like a middle linebacker I'm reacting to the movements of the guards to determine if it's a run or pass play. After that I take my best guess as to where the action will be. I'm still struggling to track a football in the air and snag a photo of a receiver leaping for the catch, but that's next on my agenda. I also want to start capturing the physicality of football. Not necessarily big hits, but the physical interaction between a guard and a defensive tackle or fullback and a linebacker.

Garrett Gilbert & The Mustangs


Last year (2013) was the first season I began shooting football. I had the opportunity to cover both the SMU Mustangs and North Texas Mean Green for Central Track

Although I write recaps of the games I always try to make sure I walk away from the field with photos that can tell the story on their own. The first few games I shot, I struggled with an introductory shot -- a shot to open the photo essay. Unfortunately SMU's fan attendance is extremely low so a crowd shot wouldn't be very sexy and the Mustangs' pre-game tradition is to run through pyrotechnics that keeps photographers at a distance and those shots lack intimacy. 

So for the final SMU game I attended that season I decided to get in the tunnel before the team ran through the fire display. What I didn't expect was for the team captains to come out to the field so soon, so without much time to shoot I quickly shot from the hip and was fortunate enough to capture a candid image of the captains led by quarterback Garrett Gilbert.

Settings: Canon EOS 5D Mark III, EF28mm f/1.8 USM, Manual exposure, 1/500 sec, f/5.6, ISO 200