This is what I do for my high school sports pics.
For tennis, I will organize the pictures by players; singles (1,2,3,4), doubles, (1,2,3,4,5,6), BEFORE I edit.
I found that it is mentally easier for me to deal with a smaller number of pics of one player vs. couple thousand pics of all the players.
First are the culls. You know the mistakes, like the shot of my foot. Then OOF, blocked subjects, embarrassing images, etc.
The goal here is to "try" to bring 1,000 - 3,000 shots down to 200 - 500. Often I don't reach that goal and have to do that in edit or post edit.
In editing I will evaluate the images again, and decide which to edit, and which to skip.
- Level. A LOT of my sport images are not level, because when I move and shoot, leveling the camera is not a priority.
- Crop
- Exposure; usually lighten shadows first, boost dull highlights, etc.
- White balance.
- Depending on the image, I may have to do some minor exposure adjustment after correcting the WB.
- Sharpen
- Save. When I save, I will save with the jersey number in front of the file name. ie. 10-NDS1234.JPG. This sorts all the pics of player #10 together, and makes the next step easier.
Post edit I will look for dupes or near dupes, to eliminate the dupes.
For sports where I can identify the players, I will evaluate the number of pics of each player. Players with too many pics, will have some of the pics deleted, to "try" to balance out the number of pics for each player. So I don't have 30 pics of one player and only 2 of another player.
For players with only one or a few pics, I will sometimes go back into the culls or cropped pics, to look for more pics of them. Again to try to balance out the number of pics of each player.