image captionThe Daily Star Sunday is among the papers that lead on Denmark footballer Christian Eriksen collapsing on the pitch during his team's Euro 2020 match with Finland. The paper reports that the midfielder was saved by team captain Simon Kjaer, who performed CPR before medics continued treatment for 15 minutes as millions watched live on TV.
image captionThe Sunday Mirror describes it as a "miracle on the pitch". On Saturday, the 29-year-old was said to be awake in hospital, with his condition having stabilised.
image caption"Saved at the Euros" is the headline on the Sunday People, which features a photo of him leaving the pitch by stretcher.
image captionIn other news, ministers fear Britain will have a six-week window to open up in the summer or risk having Covid restrictions in place until spring, the Sunday Telegraph reports. Government advisers have explained there is a "ticking clock" to lift measures before it becomes too late to do so in September because of the greater transmission of Covid in winter and seasonal pressures on the NHS. It comes as Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave his clearest signal yet that he is planning to delay the return to normality by a month.
image captionThe Sunday Express asks "will we ever be free?" The paper says MPs and scientists have warned that Britain risks never getting its core freedoms back if the 21 June unlocking date is delayed. The Express says Mr Johnson will decide on Monday whether to postpone lifting restrictions after revealing there is "worrying stuff" in the latest virus data.
image captionThe anti-corruption watchdog will this week recommend that ministers should be banned from lobbying for up to five years after leaving office and face possible fines if they break the rules, the Sunday Times reports. Lord Evans, chairman of the committee on standards in public life, is to make the proposal on Monday in an emergency review being published in the wake of the Greensill lobbying scandal.
image captionThe Queen will no longer remain silent when the Duke and Duchess of Sussex allow "mistruths" to circulate about the Royal Family in the public domain, according to the Mail on Sunday. The paper says it marks a "dramatic departure" from the monarch's long-standing policy of "never complain, never explain". The Mail on Sunday adds that the "extraordinary" move is a reflection of the Queen's exasperation at "relentless briefings" that allies of the couple have been giving to the media.