Samir Nasri believes Manchester City take on a different form when he, Kevin De Bruyne, Sergio Aguero, Yaya Toure and David Silva are all fit to play. Nasri returned to Citys starting line-up for the first time since September after a thigh injury, scoring the winner in the 2-1 victory over West Brom on Saturday Night Football.The Frenchman admitted Citys play can be predictable when both Jesus Navas and Raheem Sterling are playing, and insists he brings a different dimension to play. Nasris goal gave City a 2-1 win over West Brom Nasri told Sky Sports: The thing is when Kevin has been on the sideline, and myself as well, and David has been playing with a pain on his ankle, our game is a little bit predictable with Jesus and Raheem because they like to go to the space.With us we bring a different option, and it is good when everyone is fit. The manager can choose the players that he wants.The good thing is when you have Kun, David, Yaya and Kevin at this level it is easy to play in this team. Report: Man City 2-1 West Brom Samir Nasri scored a second-half winner on his return to the starting line-up Sergio Aguero had equalised for City in the first half Nasri was delighted to return to action with a goal, which puts City four points clear of Manchester United in the race for fourth, with United in action at Tottenham on Super Sunday.It was great to be back and to score that winning goal especially after the result of Arsenal and West Ham. I cannot explain how happy I am. I was a little bit dead at the end and thats the best thing to do before Paris.When youve been out for long youre really hungry when you get back and you just want to prove to everyone that you have the quality for this squad, especially after all the new players that we had this year. I wanted to give my contribution to my team. Also See: Nasri nets winner on return Pellegrini: Vital win Nasri delighted with return Saturdays top stats F1 photographer Mark Sutton talks ESPN through his six favourite shots from two of the most iconic races on the calendar, Spa-Francorchamps and Monza.Catch me if you canCamera: Nikon D5 | Lens: 24-70mm F2.8 | Shutter speed: 1/320th of a second | Aperture: F6.3 | ISO: 200This was an amusing moment at the end of the race. This guy was a fire marshal at the far end of the straight, and when the race ended and the fans poured on to the track for the podium ceremony he was in no mood to hang around. For some reason he had this scooter with him and he just bolted. Its something different but also nice because you can see the fans sprinting down to get the best view of the podium, one of the things that makes races like Spa -- in traditional F1 heartland -- so special compared to some of the newer additions to the calendar.The best corner in F1?Camera: Nikon D5 | Lens: Nikkor 24-70mm F2.8 | Shutter speed: ?1/250th of a second with flash | Aperture: ?F5.6 | ?ISO: 1600I went out to Eau Rouge on Friday afternoon and it is still truly breathtaking, regardless of what people say about the new cars. Its still an amazing corner to go to, you dont get a real sense of the speed until you are sat right there watching them fly past you. The great bit about standing here, on the inside of the bottom of the hill, is you can see the line they take through the rest of the corner. If you look closely you can see it on the road further up. I chose this shot because the car is blurry, adding to the sense of how fast they are going at this point.The line of dutyCamera: Nikon D5 | Lens: Nikkor 70-200mm F2.8 | Shutter speed: 1/250th of a second | Aperture: F4 | ISO: 1600There was a lot more security for the race at Spa -- it was very obvious when you were there, with armed police all over the place. That sort of thing has the potential to unnerve some people. While he was signing autographs, Lewis Hamilton went over to one of them and signed his overalls on the arm. It was a nice moment -- it took away some of the tension of them being there, and the soldiier really seemed to appreciate it.dddddddddddd Any moment you can capture a driver being normal, doing something you dont tend to see on the cameras, is a great shot because it makes them seem more human rather than just these stars driving fast cars.?Farewell, FelipeCamera: NikonD5 | Lens: ?Nikkor 70-200mm F2.8 | Shutter Speed: 1/640th of a second | Aperture: ?F7.1 | ISO: 200Everyone agrees Felipe Massa is one of the nice guys of the paddock and this was a lovely send-off for him at Monza. Ive never seen a spontaneous ovation for a driver at a press conference but thats what he got after his initial statement. He was clearly emotional about it and had his whole family at the front row.There were a few jokes about his son, Felipinho, being in Formula One one day, but Massas wife didnt look too happy with the suggestion! I suppose Massa now has an enviable situation in that he can do whatever he wants, stock cars in Brazil, Formula E, maybe even go into management. I think hell be missed by F1, a rare character and people forget how close he came to being a world champion.Changing fortunesCamera: Nikon D5 | Lens: Nikkor 14-24mm F2.8 | Shutter Speed:1/125th of a second | Aperture: F16 | ISO: 200I was going to pick a podium shot for Nico Rosberg but this picture stood out as telling a nicer story from the Italian Grand Prix. This is just after qualifying, and Hamilton had just taken pole by half a second. Rosberg was clearly miffed how his teammate could be so much faster and after qualifying he sat looking at the timing screens, wondering where on earth Hamilton had found the time.On Sunday he got the start right, Hamilton got it wrong, and that turned the momentum back in his favour but Rosberg must wonder what he has to do to beat Lewis on days like Saturday. Its also a nice shot because 24 hours later he was on the podium celebrating a win, something he probably didnt imagine when he was sat there. ' ' '