Thoreau Photography

I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately,
to front only the essential facts of life,
and see if I could not learn what it had to teach,
and not, when I came to die,
discover that I had not lived.

There is a New King on the Court: Nikon at Wimbledon

nadal
I love tennis and one of my most memorable days involved watching Andre Agassi and the Williams sisters, Serena and Venus, beat their lesser opponents into submission on the hallowed grass of Number 1 Court (that day the schedule was better there than on Centre Court). If I came away with any sort of lasting impression, it was that of the power and dominance of Serena and Venus. It was hard to think of anyone else ever being champion as long as they chose to put on their Nikes and pick up a racquet. And, indeed, five years later, the two still dominate the Women's Final at Wimbledon, having won seven of the last nine championships between them.

In some ways you might liken the Williams sisters to Canon, because up until this year, if you looked in the press box you saw only a swathe of big white lenses. Canon was clearly the dominant player in action sports photography. But if the Williams sisters have been impressive at Wimbledon, Roger Federer's reign as champion has seemed as predictable as the showers that soak the championships at inopportune intervals. A champion for five years in a row – and going for a sixth – surely he is a better analogy for Canon's complete dominance?

Until this year, that is. Just as Rafael Nadal won a scintillating contest to uplift the Men's Championship Cup, a glance at the photographers' dugout showed that there was a new kid on the block there too: the black lenses of Nikon seemed to be the match of those of the white ones from Canon. Such a transformation in the representation of pro gear is unprecedented in my experience and points to the undoubted success of the autofocus system and performance on the Nikon D3 and D300 – coupled with excellent high ISO noise control – making for fast, responsive cameras that produce output of the highest quality.

Like Nadal's focus and tenacity, you just have to sit back and admire it. I have too much invested in Canon glass to shift camps at this stage, so I am going to enjoy the competition. As the Men's Final showed, Nadal didn't just play well, he also brought out the best in Federer. I'm really hoping that the competition from Nikon will bring out the best from Canon.