NEWS OF THE WORLD: John Terry will this week be told to hand in a written transfer request to prove he's serious about quitting Chelsea. Also: Samuel Eto'o will drop his astronomic wage demands to join Manchester United.
SUNDAY MIRROR: Michael Owen will be a more lethal Manchester United marksman than Carlos Tevez. That's the opinion of former England boss Glenn Hoddle. Also: AC Milan are ready to offer £20million cash plus Mathieu Flamini for Emmanuel Adebayor.
SUNDAY TIMES: Florentino Perez, the big-spending president of Real Madrid, wants the world's wealthiest football clubs to create a European Super League, and is ready to take on Uefa if they do not adapt the Champions League to better suit the ambitions of the biggest clubs.
THE PEOPLE: Carlos Tevez last night insisted he is not a traitor for leaving Manchester United for rivals City. Also: Peter Crouch is set to move to
Sunderland after Black Cats boss Steve Bruce made a £14million bid that matches Portsmouth's asking price.
DAILY STAR SUNDAY: Michael Owen claimed yesterday that he had been made to feel like a ''criminal'' because of all his injuries. Also: Cristiano Ronaldo last night insisted he is worth his world record £80m transfer fee.
THE INDEPENDENT: Roger Federer, who knows all about winning Grand Slam singles titles and could claim a record 15th at Wimbledon this afternoon, said yesterday that Andy Murray has ''put himself in a good position'' to win a Slam in the near future.
SUNDAY EXPRESS: Serena Williams beat her elder sister Venus to clinch her third Grand Slam victory in 12 months and then mocked the system that has her down as only No2 in the world. Also: Michael Owen has claimed he was made to feel like a 'criminal' because of all his injuries.
MAIL ON SUNDAY: Manchester City will make one last effort to prise England captain John Terry from Chelsea with a £35milliion bid and wages of £200,000 a week. Also: Roger Federer can create history on the Centre Court today, with a promise to remain at the summit of the game to allow his unborn child to witness his brilliance at the 2012 London Olympics.
THE OBSERVER: With the series lost and with the Springboks making 10 changes for this final game, something special had to happen to prevent this being not so much a dead rubber as a rigor-mortis Test.
SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: The British and Irish Lions finished off their bruising Test series against South Africa with a record-equalling victory at Ellis Park yesterday.