Image by Claudia Greco, Canon Emerging Talent Award Special Merit, World Sports Photography Awards 2026. © Claudia Greco
Young sports photographers see things differently, suggests Richard Heathcote, Chief Sports Photographer at Getty Images. Richard – himself a multiple award winner – recently served as a judge for the Canon Emerging Talent Award at the World Sports Photography Awards 2026, where he was struck by the standard.
"I've been a sports photographer for 30 years," he says. "When I was starting out, I was always taught to wait, be patient, fill the frame and make it stand out. It was always about capturing a clean picture of a particular moment. Your portfolio was a collection of strong photographs of these individual moments."
Today's young photographers, however, are much more focused on the storytelling side of sports photography – as illustrated by the portfolios showcased in the Canon Emerging Talent Award.
Social media has played a role in this evolution, Richard says. "More people are shooting for social media content creation instead of what you'd call classic sports photography. That's not a bad thing. It's interesting to see how people are looking at events they're covering and how they put a set of pictures together.
"Younger photographers haven't grown up buying newspapers or magazines with these single big, amazing pictures on their front covers – they've looked at content on phones and tablets and laptops," he adds. "It has naturally brought in that storytelling element, similar to how a reportage photographer might work. It's more reflective of how sports photography is now used. If you flick through social media feeds of sports clubs or organisations, the pictures aren't necessarily individual standout pictures. Rather, they complement each other to build a theme."
Not all the submissions Richard judged followed this approach. "There was a real mix," he says. "Some portfolios did include five clear moments of individual events that weren't really connected. They were fantastic. But a high proportion of pictures had a clear connection – where one image led to the next."