Shooting 4k will bring you more trouble than benefits : overheating, huge file size, battery dying too early and no real benefit. We tried using the GoPro but it wasn't good. Need the quality good enough to see but keep the file size small enough to upload. If you're in the stands it's a bear to manage a tripod and fans cheering and stomping are going to shake the living heck out of your footage! Lastly, most fields, school gyms and arenas have a press box. Once again, that's great for single player highlights for recruiting video but it doesn't sound like that's what he's after. His goal is to show tape to players and break it down, not have a broadcast tight following of the puck. The coach is going to want to see at least 1/3 of the ice where the action is if not a full half. That said, game tape should be shot much wider than what you are used to seeing as a TV broadcast. It sounds like the coach is just looking for game play so 1080 is more than enough. If you were doing focusing on the play of a single player than 4k 60fps for sure. I film a lot of highschool sports so I'm speaking from a lot of experience. They may only be at about half way but the second half of a battery always seems to drain a lot faster than the first half! I'd also bring three batteries and change to a new one in between each period. You might be able to get a whole game on a 64 gig but why risk it. The SanDisk extreme is good enough for what you're doing. If you're planning on doing a fair amount of video work you should get a 128 gig card. Shoot in 1080p, 30fps at the highest bitrate possible. Try and stay around center ice so each end isn't terribly far for both focal length and focus distance.
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