F1 photographer Mark Sutton talks ESPN through his favourite shots from Hungary and Germany. Kimi for presidentCamera model: Nikon D5 | Lens: Nikkor 70-200 F2.8 | Shutter Speed: 1/320th of a second | Aperture: F11 | ISO: 200I was obviously in a prime position on the podium. I got that position again in the corner which I was privileged to be in again once more. From there you can just shoot whatever you see really and that tends to be people, flags, podium, parc ferme, teams, and every celebration obviously on the podium. You just cant stop shooting to be honest and after the podium finished a lot of the fans stayed on the track and they paraded up and down, waving to all the TV crews. Some of them did spot me on top of the roof actually, not these ones in particular. Its a really good atmosphere in Hungary and the fans go crazy. Theyve been there all day in the sun, enjoying themselves. They tend to take out that sort of happiness on the track when the race has finished. So its quite a funny moment, Kimi for president.Bulls and ArrowsCamera model: Nikon D5 | Lens: Nikkor 70-200 F2.8 | Shutter Speed: 1/320th of a second | Aperture: F8 | ISO: 200At Turn 2 what we would generally do is do the grid, do all the grid preparations and whatever goes on. Then we are kicked off sort of 15 minutes before the start of the race. We then go into the paddock and down the stairs to where the photo area is, pick up the long lenses and then you literally go down to Turn 2. Its quite a tight angle coming into that corner and obviously all the cars pile in there. There doesnt seem to be many crashes there to be honest -- more at Turn 1 where its tighter -- but its still a nice group shot coming into that corner. I actually shot it more from the banking on the left, rather than shooting it head on. I thought Id go for a slightly different angle, coming towards me which I think is quite nice.An interested spectatorCamera model: Nikon D5 | Lens: 70-200mm F2.8 & 1.4x converter | Shutter Speed: 1/1000th of a second | Aperture: F6.3 | ISO: 200The bear one is quite funny from Hungary, only because it was put there by marshals. I saw it on the first day. It was basically watching TV on the first day. They had set a TV up on a stand and they put him on a chair and one of our photographers took some pictures of that. I knew I was going out there on Saturday morning before qualifying and I went out there quite early. They then put it into a swimming pool with a duck, amazingly like it was on holiday. They were giving it different scenarios to be in and I think its quite funny, its just nice to have some humour from the marshals. I have seen bears and ducks and various different animals but this was quite a big teddy bear, I guess thats better because it stands out in the picture.Can I stand there please, Lewis?Camera model: Nikon D5 | Lens: 70-200mm F2.8 with 1.4x converter | Shutter speed: 1/320th of a second | Aperture: F8 | ISO: 400Some people just do the rear shot which is fine, but a load of guys from the back -- I dont particularly like it -- but they think its quite moody. You are trying to create an atmospheric picture. Its quite nice, Ive seen some where the planes go over and things like that and thats quite nice but it just gets a bit repetitive. I went round and I looked over and I couldnt believe my eyes when I put my camera up, I could see Nico was behind and I thought just let him in, its not difficult.I looked to the other end and Ericssons was the furthest to the left and hes got loads of space and theres actually a plaque on the floor where someone should be and maybe someone went in the wrong place. Obviously Nico seems to have got the hump, it looks like that to me with the pictures. Maybe the pictures tell the bad story I dont know! Nico is staring right at him and Im thinking -- because I didnt see these clips before I didnt know what was going on -- it looked like he was a bit p----- off about the fact that you want to be at the front at your home race.Déjà vuCamera model: Nikon D5 | Lens: Nikkor 500mm F4ED | Shutter Speed: 1/250th of a second | Aperture: F5.6 | ISO: 1600He was there all weekend. He was at the football -- I covered the football on the Wednesday night -- and obviously that was an event for Michael, so we knew he was coming to the track. He was in Mercedes the first day I think on the Friday, pretty much spent all day in the back and then turned up with Michaels PA on the Saturday and was in Ferrari, which was quite interesting. He had just been invited by the team to sit there and listen to what they say. Michael hid the kids from the limelight and when Mick started driving in karts they had this arrangement with the German media that they wouldnt publish any pictures of his face. It was good to see him there and hes obviously a cool kid. It was good to see them in the garage, at the end of the day hes had a feel for what goes on and what works. Sam Koch Jersey . After a replay, the winner will meet Sunderland in the quarterfinals. Sagbo did well to control Sone Alukos right cross and fire past Brighton goalkeeper Peter Brezovan. 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NEW YORK -- Turns out that was one costly towel toss for Travis Kelce.The Kansas City Chiefs tight end was fined $24,309 by the NFL on Friday after he protested a non-call by mockingly chucking his towel toward an official and being ejected.Kelce thought Jacksonvilles Prince Amukamara should have been called for pass interference in the end zone during the Chiefs 19-14 victory last Sunday. The tight end grabbed his towel and threw it at one of the officials. The official hurled his hat in response; another official tossed a penalty flag on Kelce, and the tight end was tossed from the game.Chiefs teammate Daniel Sorensen was also fined $9,115 for a late hit out of bounds on Allen Robinson.Cleveland center Cam Erving and Dallas defensive end David Irving were each docked $9,115 for their tussle in the Cowboys 35-10 win Sunday. Irving punched Erving before getting his helmet ripped off.Miamis Andre Branch, San Franciscos Quinton Patton and Los Angeles William Hayes were all fined $18,231 for horse-collar tackles in theiir respective games.ddddddddddddBranch was called for a penalty after he took down Jets wide receiver Brandon Marshall?for a 1-yard loss in the first quarter of the Dolphins 27-23 win. Also in that game, New York cornerback Buster Skrine was fined $9,115 for unnecessary roughness, as was defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson.Pattons penalty came when he tackled New Orleans linebacker Craig Robertson during an interception return that led to a touchdown in the Saints 41-23 win.Hayes horse-collar tackle came in the fourth quarter of Los Angeles 13-10 loss to Carolina.Detroits Johnson Bademosi and Green Bays Ty Montgomery were both fined $9,115 for roughing-the-kicker penalties in their games.Also docked $9,115 were San Diegos D.J. 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