Well, back to the 200mm lens. I do not have a lot of 200/2 shots on this computer or its storage drive, but I found a set shot under HORRIFICALLY windy conditions at a park in Vancouver, Washington, right down along the mighty Columbia River, where east winds often howl at 20 to 30 MPH, as they did on this day. It was unpleasantly windy. Chapped lips in an hour windy. Very unpleasant.This shoot was virtually a total washout due to
extreme wind ruining probably 90 percent of all the frames. Hair, clothes, flapping all over the place. I used the VR to stabilize me against the wind, and it did well at 1/500 and 1/640 second.
A lot of the nature of bokeh depends on the background subject itself, but this set has point light sources from all the wind-ripples on the water. These are at f/4.5 for the close-up shot, and the last two were at f/5, as in f/5.0. So we have head-and-shoulders at f/4.5; a half-body shot at f/5, and a full-length shot at f/5.
As you can see, on a close-up type portrait with the camera close to the subject and a 200mm lens, even f/4.5 "blows out" and makes the background almost unrecognizable. When the camera to subject distance increases, so that a 200mm frames a person half-body, the bokeh dots on pinpoint light sources are medium in size, and the lens gives a pretty look to this type of backdrop, with the out of focus bokeh balls being fairly evenly-illuminated, and not with hard-edged "rings" around the outer circle, and also not with concentric

or "onion ring" type bokeh balls on the OOF highlights; when the camera moves back far enough to show a full-length person standing, the bokeh dots at f/5 are smaller, yet this lens has a nice, pleasant rendering of the overall scene's OOf areas.
The Canon and Nikon 200mm f/2 lenses are really a PITA to carry and shoot. This was about the last time I used this lens. Just too doggone big and heavy to lug around when one wants to have other gear along.Tony, I would really advise you to listen to gryphonslair99, and look into the Canon 200mm f/2.8 prime lens if you want a single focal length 200mm lens, one that is actually carryable under normal, everyday situations, and one that does not warrant a monopod for every use longer than 20 minutes.