Kealios wrote:
Evil and Chaos wrote:
A Nikon D-80 with either a zoom or Macro lens depending on the subject to be photographed... somewhat out of your budget though!
That is my Option B - the D80 is the nice family camera we have

OK, so Im most concerned with action pics of games in progress. I was thinking of buying some kind of overhead lighting system and taking the flash off when doing my shots, but that might be overkill. Maybe cheaper than a new camera!
Take, for example, the last BatRep I posted, where I couldnt even see the Sentinels who were primed white and standing on my road. The flash, even from 6 feet out, just washed everything out. THATS what I want to avoid.
The main problem you have is that the volume of light from the flash disipates according to the 'inverse square' rule - basically it is very bright close up, and rapidly gets dark further away. So you need to get the whole area lit evenly. You could try bouncing the flash off the ceiling (needs a cable and hot-shoe accessory - which may not work with pocket digitals) or if you need to keep the camera close, try diffusing the flash by covering it with some tissue. If you are going to record a game, as others suggest a mini tripod would be sensible so you can speed up setting up (check out the gorilla tripod).
Final thought is that you do not need a huge amount of light, so you could get a friend to hold a flashlight from some distance (to create 'natural' shadows), while switching off the camera flash.
Or as others have said, you could get daylight bulbs, fiddle with lenses, shutter speeds, filters and exposures (or the internal camera settings etc) and get really 'professional' about the whole thing.
