Behind the Lens with Joseph Petrilli '16

Feature Story

Behind the Lens with Joseph Petrilli '16

Alum blends passions into his profession.

By Susan Allen 鈥09, 鈥14

Joe Petrilli
Joseph Petrilli '16 sits on Stockton's athletic field while setting up to shoot an episode of the Athletics DocuSeries. | Photo by Susan Allen '09, '14

 

Joseph Petrilli '16 looked through his camera鈥檚 viewfinder at an empty chair positioned at the center of Stockton鈥檚 synthetic turf field.

As he calculated the scene, he communicated back and forth with Jeff Topping and Nicholas Georgel of Production Services to focus a second camera on men鈥檚 lacrosse coach Kevin Zulauf, who would be arriving any minute to be interviewed for an Athletics DocuSeries.

As a Stockton student, Petrilli spent most of his time on the turf field with Coach Zulauf as a player on the men鈥檚 lacrosse team, but on this late winter afternoon, he was back on the field as a Stockton staff videographer, blending two of his passions.

Rewind...

Petrilli found his interests in lacrosse and filmmaking while attending Absegami High School. 

As a Stockton freshman, his journey wasn鈥檛 yet clear. Petrilli, who has always been intrigued by how the mind works, started as a Psychology major and quickly realized he was missing something.  

鈥淓veryone knew me as the media and video guy in high school,鈥 he said, recalling his days as Gami TV鈥檚 anchor where he and his best friend broadcasted news to the entire school. 鈥淲hy did I stray from that?鈥 he asked himself.

At the time, social media outlets were still in their infancy and careers in visual communications and storytelling didn鈥檛 exist yet. Despite the uncertain career path, Petrilli decided to stick to his passion. He switched his major to Communication Studies and began his journey as a filmmaker.  

As a former student-athlete, Petrilli naturally has an eye for the stories on and off the field and behind the scenes in the stands, locker rooms, dugouts and gyms.

鈥淚 made it a point to dive into the sports field full force to see where it would take me. The first person I texted was Coach Zulauf,鈥 he explained.  

Capturing History...

After that, Petrilli was back on the field at practice, interviewing the team and capturing highlights from their games in a freelance capacity.

During preseason in 2019, Petrilli asked team members to share their goals. The answer was unanimous鈥攖o win the conference championship and to get the first bid to the NCAA tournament in school history.

鈥淟ittle did I know that was the season they would win their first conference championship against Montclair, so I pretty much documented their best season in school history,鈥 he said. 

Had a camera been filming Petrilli, it would have shown him jumping and cheering with the team after panning from the action of the game-winning goal to the sudden burst of celebration from the players.  

Recalling that moment, he said, 鈥淚鈥檓 sweating as it鈥檚 happening, my heart is racing 100 miles per hour. In my mind, I鈥檓 asking myself, am I capturing the shot correctly, is this looking good, and then to, oh my, something epic is happening, and I鈥檓 here to capture it.鈥  

Whenever you envision something, you do whatever you have to do to get that shot.鈥
鈥 Joseph Petrilli '16

After the game, Petrilli couldn鈥檛 wait to get home. His memory cards were holding momentous footage, and he was anxious to make an edit for the team, fans and coaches to watch the history that was just made.

鈥淲hen you鈥檝e been an athlete, you know the adrenaline they鈥檙e feeling. When you鈥檙e recording it, and know you鈥檙e eventually going to deliver it to someone, you have a similar adrenaline rush,鈥 he said.  

When Zulauf watched the highlight video, it took him right back to that moment.

Fast Forward...

鈥淛oe is a great person and very dedicated to his craft. He put in a tremendous amount of time capturing priceless footage that will positively impact our program forever. Through his editing, he was able to tell a story while putting the viewer right in the middle of the action,鈥 said Zulauf.

Nicholas Georgel and Joseph Petrilli set up cameras
Nicholas Georgel (left) and Joseph Petrilli make sure they get the perfect shot set up. Photo by Susan Allen '09, '14

Petrilli's lacrosse films attracted thousands of views on his social media feeds and opened the door to an official partnership between Production Services and Athletics to create a DocuSeries on all Stockton sports as well as highlights from intramurals and the strength and conditioning program. 

On the field, Petrilli puts himself in the action.  

鈥淲henever you envision something, you do whatever you have to do to get that shot,鈥 he explained.   

Sometimes that means riding in the back of a golf cart, stabilizing a camera while bouncing over rough terrain, with the cross country team chasing you.  

When a team loses, there鈥檚 still an important story to tell. 鈥淓ven in a loss, which people think is a challenge to capture, I look for the moments in the game that the team learned from and the part where the team tried to fight back. I want the viewer to understand what that game meant to the team at that time,鈥 he said.

Petrilli captures a team鈥檚 vibe and persona. He turns away from the game to look back at the bench to see teammates getting hyped. He looks past the team at their families and fans in the stands to capture their reactions too.

When recalling the lacrosse team鈥檚 Petrilli said, 鈥淚鈥檒l carry that memory with me forever. And hopefully there will be more memories I capture that are similar."  

Watch the seven episodes of the Athletics DocuSeries on the . When sports resume, the series will continue.