Youth and High School Football Video Services: Clips, Reels, and Full Game Coverage
Professional 4K video services for youth and high school football in Arizona, including individual game clips, player highlight reels, full game coverage, and event photography.
I film youth and high school football games in the Phoenix East Valley with Sony cinema cameras at 4K/120fps. After the game, I cut every play into an individual clip and post them on my storefront. Parents browse, preview, and buy the clips they want for $5 each. No subscriptions, no packages you don’t need, no minimum purchase.
I also do player highlight reels for recruiting, full game coverage for coaches and teams, and event photography.
Everything lives at bdigitalmedia.io/clips for video and bdigitalmedia.io/pics for photos.
Here’s the full breakdown.
Individual Game Clips — $5 Each
Each clip is a single play from a game I filmed. Pre-snap to post-whistle, color graded, properly exposed, in full 4K resolution. No watermark on the purchased file. You own it. Post it, share it, print a frame and put it on the wall — it’s yours.
How to Find Your Kid’s Plays
- Go to bdigitalmedia.io/clips
- Find your kid’s game (organized by date and league, GYFL, STYFL, Williamsfield)
- Browse the clip grid. Each clip has a thumbnail from the middle of the play
- Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) to watch a 720p watermarked preview
- Found the one? Tap “Buy $5”
- Apple Pay, Google Pay, or card through Stripe
- Download your 4K clip immediately
The whole thing takes about 30 seconds.
Re-Downloads
Lost the file? Phone broke? No problem. Go to bdigitalmedia.io/clips/purchases, enter the email you used at checkout, and download any of your clips again. Free. No time limit.
Why $5?
Because it should be an impulse buy. A parent standing on the sideline right after their kid scores shouldn’t have to think about whether $5 is worth it. It’s less than the Gatorade and snacks you bought at the concession stand.
Example Clips
Here’s what the finished product looks like. These are actual clips from recent games:
Player Highlight Reels — Custom Quote
A highlight reel is a curated edit of your kid’s best plays, cut into a 3-5 minute video designed for recruiting and social media. This is a different product from individual clips. It’s an edited piece with:
- Player name and number overlay
- Down, distance, and situation context
- Slow-motion replays of key moments
- Clean transitions (no flashy effects. Coaches want to see the player, not the editing)
- Music bed (optional)
- Delivered in 4K
Highlight reels are priced per project because the scope varies. A single-game reel is different from a full-season compilation across six games. Contact me for a quote. I’ll give you a straight number, no runaround.
Who Needs a Highlight Reel
If your kid is a junior or senior in high school and wants to play at the next level, a highlight reel is essential. College coaches at the D2, D3, NAIA, and JUCO level rely heavily on film. A clean, professional reel is the first thing they ask for.
For kids at smaller programs like Williamsfield, where scouts aren’t showing up to games every Friday, a highlight reel might be the only way a college coach sees your kid play. The kids who get recruited from smaller programs aren’t necessarily the most talented — they’re the ones whose film gets seen.
For youth football players, individual clips are usually more useful than a formal reel. A parent posting a 12-second clip of their 8-year-old’s first touchdown on Instagram doesn’t need a produced highlight video. They need the raw play in good quality.
The Recruiting Strategy
The highlight reel is step one. Step two is getting it in front of coaches:
- Hudl: Upload the full reel and tag it with position, height, weight, and GPA. Most college coaches check Hudl regularly
- Direct email: Send coaches the reel link with a brief intro. Include stats, measurables, and your coach’s contact info
- Social media: Post individual clips on Twitter/X and Instagram. Tag the school’s football account and the recruit’s position coach
Here’s an example of a finished highlight reel:
Full Game Coverage
For coaches and teams who want the whole game on film — not just individual clips, but continuous sideline coverage of every play.
I set up on the press box side and follow the ball from snap to whistle on every single play. It doesn’t matter if it’s a two-yard run up the middle or a 60-yard bomb. Every kid on that field deserves to have their moment on film. The parent of the left guard who pancaked a defender cares about that play just as much as the parent of the running back who scored.
Full game coverage is shot at 4K/120fps, which gives coaches the option to slow down key moments for film study. The 120fps means any play can be slowed to 4x without losing quality, useful for evaluating technique, reading defenses, or breaking down a specific play.
Here’s an example of full game footage:
Individual Player Highlights
This is different from a formal highlight reel. Individual player highlights are the cherry-picked best plays for a specific kid from a specific game: no overlays, no music, no editing beyond the color grade and trim.
These are what parents actually use the most. A 15-second clip of a touchdown catch gets way more engagement on Instagram than a 4-minute highlight reel. And athletes can DM individual plays to coaches with context. “Here’s me running a post route against man coverage” hits different than “here’s my full highlight reel.”
Social media ready, shareable, and exactly what parents want when they say “I just want a good video of my kid’s play.”
What I Shoot With
- Sony FX30: Super 35 cinema camera built for run-and-gun shooting
- Sony A7V: full-frame hybrid for the second angle and photography
- 4K at 120fps: full resolution with the option for smooth slow motion (4x)
- Sony 70-200mm f/2.8 GM II: telephoto lens for tight action from the sideline
- Sony 24-70mm f/2.8 GM II: versatile zoom for the second angle and wider shots
- DaVinci Resolve: industry-standard color grading (same software used on major films)
- Two-camera setup for high school: FX30 on the sideline plus the A7V on a tripod at the end zone for red zone plays. Two angles make highlights dramatically better because you can show the same play from the skill position and from behind, which coaches love for evaluating football IQ
The quality difference between professional cinema camera footage and what you get from an iPhone in the stands is significant. Jersey numbers are crisp, skin tones are accurate, and the 120fps means any play can be slowed down to see exactly what happened.
Leagues and Coverage Area
GYFL — Gilbert Youth Football League
I’ve been filming GYFL games across 8U, 12U, and 14U divisions. The 8U parents are the most enthusiastic buyers I have. These are kids playing organized football for the first or second time. Every first down is a big deal. Every tackle is a big deal. The kid who scored his first touchdown ever? That clip sells immediately, usually before I’ve even finished uploading the rest of the game.
The 14U games have more polished play and bigger highlight-reel moments, but the 8U games have the raw joy. I love covering both.
STYFL — San Tan Youth Football League
Teams from Queen Creek, San Tan Valley, Gilbert, and surrounding areas. STYFL playoffs are a different level. The intensity goes up, kids play harder, coaches coach harder, and the moments that happen carry more weight. I shot a STYFL semifinal where a kid picked off a pass in the end zone with 40 seconds left to seal the game. That clip sold 15 copies in the first hour because every parent on the team wanted the moment their kid’s team won.
High School — Williamsfield and Beyond
For high school games, I bring the two-camera setup. The FX30 on the sideline plus the A7V at the end zone. Two angles make highlight reels dramatically better for recruiting because coaches can evaluate football IQ from multiple perspectives.
Williamsfield is a smaller school with less exposure but also less competition for film time. Big 6A programs might have 3-4 cameras and a film crew. Smaller schools don’t usually have that luxury. That’s the gap I fill.
Other Coverage
- College: available on request
- Other sports: flag football, basketball, baseball, soccer, lacrosse. The setup works for any sport where parents want to see their kids’ best moments in high quality
- Phoenix East Valley based: I cover games across Gilbert, Queen Creek, San Tan Valley, and the surrounding area. If your league or team isn’t on this list but you’re in the metro area, reach out
Event Photography — $8 Per Photo
For events like off-road racing, motorsports, and action sports, I shoot with a Sony A1 and deliver high-resolution photos processed from RAW files. The King of Hammers 2026 gallery has over 1,500 photos at $8 each, or you can buy the full gallery for $50.
Photos work the same way as clips: browse the gallery, preview watermarked versions, buy the ones you want, download in full resolution.
For youth sports photography, photos are $5 each. Same RAW-to-JPEG processing, same quality, lower price point because I want parents to be able to grab a few great shots of their kid without overthinking it.
For Coaches and Teams
I offer team packages for coaches who want all clips from a game for film study. If your league wants official video coverage with individual clip sales as a revenue or service model for families, I can set that up. The infrastructure is built and running. It’s just a matter of showing up and shooting.
For high school programs, I can provide full-season coverage packages that include game film for coaches plus individual clip sales and highlight reels for players and families. Contact me to discuss what makes sense for your program.
How to Get Started
For individual clips: Just go to bdigitalmedia.io/clips and buy what you want. No account needed.
For event photos: Browse galleries at bdigitalmedia.io/pics.
For highlight reels or game coverage inquiries: Contact me directly or DM on Instagram at @bdigital00.
For brand and commercial video: Check out my portfolio and get in touch.
I’m transparent about pricing because I think the highlight reel market has a transparency problem. Some companies charge $500+ for a reel cut from footage they didn’t even shoot. My process is different. I film the game myself, in 4K at 120fps, with professional color grading. The quality difference between phone footage and proper cinema camera footage is night and day, and college coaches notice.
You tell me what you need, I tell you what it costs. No sales pitch, no upsell, no “packages starting at $299.”