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Bostonia: The Alumni Magazine of Boston University

Fall 2011 Table of Contents

Boston Red Sox, Behind the Lens

Michael Ivins (COM’01) captures moments on and off the field

| From Alumni Notes | By Amy Laskowski. Video by Robin Berghaus
Watch this video on YouTube

In the video, Red Sox photographer Michael Ivins (COM’01) takes viewers behind the scenes at Fenway Park. Ivins photo by Cydney Scott; all other photos by Ivins

Photographer Michael Ivins was on deadline. He needed an exceptional shot for a photo spread in Red Sox Magazine, and with the magazine about to go to press, the clock was ticking. Worse, there was only one player on the field, lefty reliever Hideki Okajima (below), and he didn’t even have his glove on.

Ivins watched as Okajima calmly drew his hands together, stretched his fingers wide, then brought his hands under his chin and raised his head to the sky. Ivins thought he appeared to be praying. He lay on the ground and aimed his camera upward, framing his subject against a moody gray sky. The picture was perfect. And it was on deadline.

Okajima was probably just stretching his hands, Ivins says. “But I was really pleased how this photo is so powerful; it made something out of nothing.”

As manager of photography for the Boston Red Sox, Ivins (COM’01) is responsible for all things photo. He shoots home games and away games. He shoots player portraits, charity events, and the day-to-day bustle of Fenway. He’s currently working on a massive archival photo research project—organizing the team’s collection of photographs, many to be published next year in a book commemorating Fenway Park’s 100th anniversary.

“It’s a dream job,” says the athletic Connecticut native, adjusting his ever-present Ray-Bans. “I love the fans, the atmosphere, the travel, and coming to work at Fenway Park every day. As the season goes on and on, there’s a buzz in the air that really keeps me going.”

Ivins studied photojournalism at the College of Communication and later managed the COM photo lab. An internship at Boston magazine was a turning point. “When I was there they were really focusing on their ‘Best of Boston’ issue,” he says. “I had to shoot a ton of stuff, and I got seven or eight photographs published in the magazine. It inspired me to become a professional.”

He freelanced for local newspapers and eventually landed gigs with the Boston Herald, Reuters, and the European Pressphoto Agency. “I developed a professional sports portfolio,” he says, “and I got my foot in the door because I always made myself available.”

Michael Ivins shot this photo of Hideki Okajima for Red Sox Magazine. “I was really pleased how this photo is so powerful,” Ivins says.

In 2008, Ivins heard about the Red Sox position from a friend and applied immediately. He met with team president and CEO Larry Lucchino (Hon.’08), who seemed impressed by Ivins’ ability to juggle multiple jobs. “I don’t shy away from hard work,” he told Lucchino. He was hired that day.

Ivins says the biggest challenge for sports photographers is freezing a moment that’s over in milliseconds. The best way to get the shot, he says, is to lie in wait. (His camera of choice: a Nikon D3S.)

“You certainly can’t follow the ball, because it’s moving too fast,” he says. “If you want to capture something like a diving catch, you really have to be trained on the fielder already, hoping that the ball is coming his way. Sometimes it works out, and sometimes you’re just waiting and waiting.”

Being one of Boston’s most sought-after sports photographers has its perks, like the recent opportunity to shoot the Stanley Cup finals at TD Garden. Ivins also gets to see parts of Fenway that most fans can only imagine—roof spots, the dugout, behind the manually operated scoreboard—and to score face time with Theo, Big Papi, and Papelbon. When music groups like Aerosmith and the Dave Matthews Band perform at the historic park, he shoots them, too. And a favorite annual assignment is going up in a helicopter for shots of Fenway and the Boston skyline for the Sox photo collection.

Of course, there’s always a downside. “Plenty of my shots have been ruined by the hot dog vendors walking up and down the aisles.”

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