Jason O. Watson Photography

advanced search 
    about | blog | galleries | travel | nat'l parks | code replacement home | updates | cart | login    
31 Oct 2009, 9:01pm
Subscribe 1 comment
  • A good football game in the WAC

    I was assigned to shoot the Idaho Vandals at the San Jose State Spartans on October 10th. US Presswire wanted me to shoot Nathan Enderle, Idaho’s quarterback (pictured above). This turned out to be a great game with several lead changes and the it wasn’t decided until late in the fourth quarter. It was also a good opportunity to shoot some stock of players that don’t usually get as much exposure as other BCS conference teams. One of the things I recall was the the light really died off quickly from late afternoon to night and Spartan Stadium is a pretty dark place to shoot at night. The sidelines were pretty tight space-wise behind the benches and I was prevented from moving behind SJSU’s bench by the security guards. I had to walk all the way around, behind the much friendlier Idaho bench to get from one end zone to the other. I was also asked four different times for my credentials while on the field, despite that it was hanging around my neck for the world to see. The field security was pretty odd, but everyone was super nice including the SID staff up in the press box. Idaho won the game 29-25.

    More photos from Idaho at San Jose State

    20091010 – Idaho at San Jose State (NCAA Football) – Images by Jason O. Watson

    31 Oct 2009, 12:16pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • San Jose Sharks NHL Home Opener vs the Columbus Blue Jackets

    The San Jose Sharks hosted the Columbus Blue Jackets at HP Pavilion in San Jose, California on October 8th. This was my first NHL game shooting, and the first since I watched the NY Islanders play the Pittsburgh Penguins at Nassau Coliseum over a decade ago. I was impressed with the crowd – it was the home opener for the Sharks and the 17,000+ fans were certainly very much into the game. This game pretty much had a little bit of everything – lots of goals (the Sharks won 6-3), a hat trick by Dany Heatly, a couple of good fights in the second period, and a penalty shot (where Heatley netted his third).

    I shot the entire game from above in one of the video booths, almost entirely with my 400mm f/2.8L. The Sharks are reconfiguring their ice level photo sports, and There were only three holes to shoot from and they were quickly taken by other shooters. All in all, very fast paced and a lot of fun to shoot.

    More images from the Blue Jackets at Sharks game

    20091008 – Columbus Blue Jackets at San Jose Sharks (NHL Hockey) – Images by Jason O. Watson

    21 Oct 2009, 8:41pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Texas Rangers at Oakland Athletics – Major League Baseball

    The above image is of Oakland Athletics infielder Daric Barton (10) sliding into home plate during the second inning against against the Texas Rangers at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum on September 22, 2009. This was my first major league game — after shooting several years of NCAA baseball, it was nice to cover a late season MLB game. The A’s dominated this one, and won 9-1 — pretty much eliminating the Ranger’s hopes of a wild card playoff birth.

    More images from this game…


    20090922 – Texas Rangers at Oakland Athletics (Major League Baseball) – Images by Jason O. Watson

    20 Oct 2009, 10:38am
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • San Jose State at Stanford – NCAA Football

    The nice thing about early season evening / twilight games is that there are often a few select spots in the stadium where late afternoon sunlight sneaks through the stands and on to the field. This image, taken on September 19, 2009, of Stanford fullback Owen Marecic (48) being tackled by San Jose State Spartans linebacker Travis Jones (14) and defensive end Carl Ihenacho (95), is one such example. The light here doesn’t even hit the field, but is just enough to highlight Marecic. Pretty cool. Here’s another example with Antonio Appleby from the 2007 season when Virginia played at NC State:

    In the Stanford / San Jose State game, I was pretty impressed with how Stanford handled the Spartans. Definitely a different crowd atmosphere than what I’m normally used to. Stanford’s band has certainly taken the eclectic pep band genre to a new level and the students, while fully into the game, seemed a little more civilized and polite than the alcohol-fueled student sections at certain ACC and SEC schools. Regardless, Stanford won easily, 42-17.

    More images from the game…


    20090919 – San Jose State at Stanford (NCAA Football) – Images by Jason O. Watson

    4 Oct 2009, 1:46pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Boise State at Fresno State – NCAA Football

    The #10 ranked Boise State Broncos came to Fresno State for a Friday night NCAA football game under the lights. This was my first game since moving west, and I drove the three hours from the Bay Area for this game. Really glad I wore shorts because it was over 100 degrees at kick off (6pm). Fresno State really loves their Bulldogs and it was a lot of fun to shoot this one as there was absolutely no defense on either side of the ball (Boise St. won 51-34). There were multiple 60+ yard touchdown runs on both sides and lots of pyrotechnics whenever Fresno St. scored. Cool stuff.

    Gallery of images from this game

    20090918 – Boise State at Fresno State (NCAA Football) – Images by Jason O. Watson

    17 Apr 2009, 11:52pm
    Subscribe 2 comments
  • A great night in Charlottesville – Dave Matthews Band

    Tonight was a night that I was looking forward to for a long time. Putting objective photojournalism aside, I have always wanted to photograph Dave Matthews and his band. I’ve been a fan since the early 1990′s, following DMB all over Virginia, DC, NC, NY, and points in between. I’ve missed that last few opportunities to shoot Dave and the guys in Charlottesville and tonight was special (at least for me).

    I’ve watched Dave and Co. at least a dozen times — but none since 2003 (front row seats at Madison Square Garden). Tonight was the first time the band has performed in Charlottesville since LeRoi Moore’s tragic passing in August 2008… and from what I was able to photograph (the first 3 songs of the set), the band still continues to entertain. LeRoi’s presence is certainly missed (I can’t imagine anyone replacing him, especially on songs like “Don’t Drink the Water”). Much to my delight, instead of starting with a fresh batch of new songs from the latest album, the band opened the show with old-time favorites “Rapunzel”, “Satellite”, and “When the World Ends”. Here are a few of my shots from the show… I’m going to buy a ticket and sit in the stands for tomorrow’s show – it was that good. :-)

    Dave Matthews Band, Charlottesville 2009

    20090417 – Dave Matthews Band (Music) – Images by Jason O. Watson

    29 Mar 2009, 2:47pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • The Longest Lacrosse Game Ever – UVa defeats UMD 10-9 in 7OT

    Yesterday’s NCAA Men’s Lacrosse game between UVA and Maryland was epic. Not because these two rivals were playing or because UVA is undefeated and ranked number 1 and Maryland is #9… but because the game went on forever. Virginia was down 9-6 with 6 or so minutes left in the game when they went on a three goal rally to tie the game and force sudden death overtime. The game seemed over 9 seconds into the first OT when Maryland quickly won the face off and put the ball in the net. UVA got a gift from one of the officials who blew his whistle (twice) just before Maryland shot the ball. The official thought Maryland wanted a timeout as soon as their player entered the box — apparently they didn’t. That then started a long afternoon – Virginia fought of several man-down penalties, while their GK Adam Ghitelman made tremendous save after tremendous save. Finally, in the 7th overtime, a NCAA Division 1 record, UVA’s Brian Carroll scored and ended the game. There were ~5,000 people in attendance — and it was a nice (long) afternoon of lacrosse.

    Gallery of Photos from #1 UVA v #9 Maryland

    2 Mar 2009, 9:13pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Snow Day… photos from around Charlottesville

    It took until March, but we finally got a significant snow here in Virginia. I spent my morning and parts of my afternoon driving around Charlottesville and surrounding Albemarle County taking photos. It’s pretty rare that we get a good snow around here (maybe a couple times year) so there were a bunch of places that I had on my list to cover. First I headed on Grounds to UVA where I did a quick shoot of the Lawn/Rotunda areas. The clouds had cleared and left nothing but sunlight and blue skies — pretty cool.

    I then headed towards Monticello and stopped at the mill next to Michie Tavern — not much there as everything was closed off. I then went up to Ashlawn-Highland, home of President Monroe, where I took the photo above at the entrance. Took a quick trip up to Afton to see if Skyline and/or Blue Ridge Parkway were open… nope.

    Most of the major roads were cleared by this morning, but secondary and some spots of the big roads were covered in snow/ice. Glad I had my Jeep Grand Cherokee instead of a two wheel drive rental car this time. :-)

    More images from Charlottesville’s March Snow…

    24 Feb 2009, 9:22pm
    Subscribe 2 comments
  • Night Lacrosse in February… brrrr

    I usually avoid wearing my winter coat to any sporting event — mainly because it makes switching between camera bodies cumbersome if not down right impossible. This is particularly true for lacrosse which is extremely fast paced. By the end of tonight’s NCAA Lacrosse game between #2 Virginia and Mount Saint Mary’s, the temperature dropped to a balmy 26 degrees — and dudes on both teams were running around in shorts. Even though UVA is ranked #2 in the nation, I quickly began to realize why I was the only (still) photographer there — it was a night game in middle of the week and it was downright cold. Virginia seems to always play Mt. St. Mary’s this time of year… in 2007, there was a night game against MSM and it was actually quite nice — “71 degrees, somewhat overcast, and breezy“… heck, 10 days earlier the official weather for the game was listed as “50 degrees, Sunny, Glorious“… yeah, umm, not tonight.

    I actually had a great time covering this game — Virginia dominated with 60+ shots and won the game 10-2. Mt. Saint Mary’s goalie deserves a lot a praise — even though he let in 10 goals, he stopped a bunch of others and was under constant pressure. Virginia dominated the entire game and it looked as if they were headed towards a shutout, but in the 4th quarter MSM scored on a 2-man advantage… they then scored again at even strength a few minutes later.

    This shot (above) is of Danny Glading (9) running past Ryan Shewell (14)… I’m particularly pleased with how my post-production is ending up — thanks to fellow photog Andrew Shurtleff and a lot of tweaking, the color is getting very close (I was having a bunch of issues with colors fading — particularly oranges and reds — in the conversion from CR2/RAW to JPEG) and with the help of a few tricks (aka Noise Ninja and a 1DM3) I’m able to shoot at much higher ISOs that I would have been able to in the past. Below is an example from the March 13, 2007 UVA/MSM game:

    Hopefully, I’ve improved in the last two years ;-)

    More photos from the UVA v Mt. St. Mary’s MLAX game

    23 Feb 2009, 4:36am
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • UVA WBB Senior Day vs Boston College

    This shot is of Carolyn Swords from Boston College — she dominated the interior with a game-high 31 points, but that wasn’t enough for BC as they fell 90-70 to Virginia on senior day. This was taken with a remote on the backboard — I usually shoot these remotes in a horizontal position and crop vertically, but this particular remote was vertical and then cropped horizontally… just mixing things up. This was pretty much one of two usable images from my 4 remotes that I placed for this game. Kind of a bummer, but that’s the way it goes — either there’s a ton of stuff or there isn’t. Also have noticed much more consistent firing of the strobes now that the flash tubes have been replaced – fewer misfires and it seems the remotes are synced much better and are hitting the light when they’re supposed to.

    The past couple of games I’ve been using the 15mm fisheye on a 20D as a floor remote (the cropping of the 1.6x sensor takes out a lot of the distortion) and when working produces some sweet images. This frees up my Mark IIN to use either with the 70-200mm in the stands or with the 24-70mm on the back of the goal padding (I’d just really rather put a 20D on the court than a IIN, plus the 15mm fisheye is much more distorted at 1.3x vs 1.6x). Only problem is that the 20D only sometimes works with lagging with the fisheye — sometimes it’s either half on half off, or all the way off, or like 2 games ago, always working. Strange things possess these cameras sometimes.

    It was senior day for the women’s team at JPJ, and it looks like there won’t be home post season action (a la NIT) for the ladies as the #21 ranked team is headed to the NCAA tournament after the ACC tournament. That leaves three regular season ACC games for the men’s team before wrapping up the 08-09 hoops season at the arena.

    More images from the UVA v BC game…

    19 Feb 2009, 11:10am
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • All is well in Hooville…

    …at least for right now. It’s been a long season for the Wahoo faithful with respect to men’s basketball. The last two games, however, have erased some of the bitter feelings with fans, first with a win over #12 Clemson then defeating in-state rival Virginia Tech 75-61.

    Photographically, there was nothing special about this game compared to others other than it was a packed baseline and I had some issues with a couple remotes. Apparently, a fellow photog thought it was a good idea to move my floor remote out of position and turn it off for me, without saying anything. Not cool. I still managed to get a nice couple of frames from that remote, once I discovered it was out of place and reoriented it during a timeout.

    The shot above is of the student section at the end of the game — they’re singing the Good Ol’ Song. Nothing special, other than having to lean over two rows of floor seats to get the shot… I like the score/graphics in the back drop.

    Some new changes for the blog today as well — I’ve integrated my website look/feel and have abandoned the previous photoblog/monotone theme… it was too restrictive and would only allow one image per post and wouldn’t allow cool things like the embedded PhotoShelter slideshow like I’m including below. PhotoShelter has also added some sweet new upgrades to their Personal Archive product (which is the back end that powers my entire website archive of 31,000+ images). Favorites include 100 thumbnails per page (instead of the previous 25), user customizable displays (if you really liked 25 thumbs instead of 100, you can set your own personal preferences via the Display Options link), and mouseover previews of all thumbnail images. Rock on!

    Gallery of my images from UVA v VT NCAA Basketball

    4 Jan 2009, 1:33pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Smoking in black and white

    Today has been a get things done in the office day… there are no basketball games so I’ve been cleaning, organizing, paying bills, keywording and pulling some images from my archive to send to a colleague. I came across this photo that I took back in June 2008 out in Mendocino, California. The photographer in the picture is Dan Heller (who writes a very insightful blog on the photography business). Dan led a workshop that I was attending that week and this was one of the many people we came across. She was our waitress a the local restaurant that we all stopped by for lunch and then we saw her walking on the street smoking a cigarette… more me the intriguing part of the moment wasn’t so much there was a young woman walking down the street smoking but rather that there were 4 or 5 photographers taking her photo.

    More of my photos from Mendocino

    3 Jan 2009, 3:57pm
    Subscribe 1 comment
  • Xavier’s Kenny Frease from Above

    The #22 Xavier men’s NCAA basketball team came to town to play UVA. Remote camera and Pocketwizard Gremlins appear to have been tamed and things started clicking for the first time in several games. This image was taken from the catwalk above one of the baskets. Since I cannot consistently lag my Canon 1D Mark III (shutter lag values range all over the place), I occasionally use this body up from above with either my 180mm macro lens (as I did today) or 70-200mm and set to shoot on ambient light. I place it on the side of the court where I’m sitting shooting with my hand held — every time I fire my hand held camera this remote is listening on the same channel as the strobes are and it fires 4-6 frames each time. The result is that I often get several frames in an aerial view of a good play where I only can get one shot with my strobed hand held. It’s a nice combination.

    More images from this game….

    30 Dec 2008, 7:24pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Holiday Hoops

    My assignment last night had me shooting more high school hoops… the local paper and TV station sponsored a tournament for all of the area high schools and there were several games. The photo above is of Michael Glover from Spotswood HS — his team beat Charlottesville HS 48-47 in pretty dramatic fashion. Spotswood led 48-46 with 4 seconds left, CHS inbounded to their star Kevin Leatherwood who drove in the lane and was fouled. Leatherwood hit his first free throw while the second shot fell short. Game over.

    I lit the gym, much as I have done in the past. Two Canon 580EX Speedlights, manual mode, 1/2 power, zoomed at 50mm (it’s very important to make sure custom function #14 on these model is set to “1″, else your lights will auto power off). With that, I was able to roughly get 1/250, f/4.5, iso640… not bad for a cave. I used a hot-shoe to PC adapter attached to each strobe and then attached on the bottom to the little feet/stand that comes with the flash. The foot is then attached to the base plate of a magic arm with super clamp and attached to the top of the bleachers in the two corners on the side that I’m shooting. I connected the flash via the PC port on the adapter to a PocketWizard Multimax, positioned the light to shine roughly just above the free throw line/key area and test to make sure everything works. I then attach a safety cable to tie down anything that could fall if someone were to bump/mess with my light and I’m good to go. It takes about 4 minutes per light, 8-10 minutes total.

    More photos from the tournament

    28 Dec 2008, 11:11pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Someone’s Number 1

    LA Techs Shordy Mulford celebrates her teams victory over UMBC

    Today was a doubleheader of women’s hoops — the first round of the Marriott Cavalier Classic at UVA. I had to get there 3 hours before the first game to set up my remotes, which was pretty much a worthless endeavor since I was having trouble with my lights / remotes again. I suspect the PocketWizard Multimax that’s used to sequence my remote cameras is out of whack and/or needing to run off of batteries instead of wall power. Or perhaps it needs to be swapped out with a different PW — I’ll find out tomorrow during the two games I’m shooting then. I hope to have this year’s gremlins out of the system before Xavier comes to town on the 3rd…

    More photos from LA Tech vs UMBC
    Images from #15 Virginia vs Rider

    24 Dec 2008, 6:37am
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Mike Scott’s one handed rebound

    Mike Scott grabs one of his 15 rebounds... with one hand

    Wow. The Hoos’ finally dispatched of an opponent the way many fans expect them to do with every team they play. Virginia, led by Mike Scott’s game high 17 points and 15 boards (a one-handed version is pictured above), dispatched of the Hampton University Pirates 74-48 at the John Paul Jones Arena in Charlottesville, VA on December 23, 2008. For me, this was a particularly fun game, given the proximity to the Christmas holiday — the arena was largely empty, the usual radio interference problems with my remotes was non-existent, and everyone seemed to be in a good mood.

    More images from this game…
    Happy Holidays to all!

    14 Dec 2008, 9:18pm
    Subscribe leave a comment
  • Australian Pelican

    Australian Pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus)

    Here is the Aussie version of the pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus). There were a bunch of these guys sitting on the banks of the Torrens River in Adelaide. They weren’t very shy, but were weary of me getting close. It took several minutes to get close enough and then I was losing a lot of my ambient light because of sunset and clouds… so I used a little bit of flash to fill in. I wanted to get something a little different than a standard bird shot… I purposely tried to keep the background dark, mainly because just seconds before along the river banks was a danger sign warning people not to swim in the “polluted water”. It seemed to me to be an interesting contrast that these beautiful birds (and dozens of other ducks, swans, etc.) seemed okay with the water. Then I realized that the part of the pollution might not be man made… the green grass covered banks were covered in tons and tons of bird poop. A humorous, yet surreal part of my day yesterday.

    After walking the city most of the day, by the end of the day I knew exactly where I wanted to be. Great light for the most part. Adelaide surprised me a little bit — I came in with mixed expectations and was blown away. It’s a really neat city with a lot going for it.

    More on this image…
    More Australia photos…

     
    -->
    SportsShooter Member
    © 2003-2010 Jason O. Watson - All rights reserved. | Archive powered by PhotoShelter
    650.924.1544 | jason@jasonowatson.com | Palo Alto, CA
    Follow me on: twitter | facebook | blog rss feed