A round-up of all the top football stories from Monday's national newspapers, with Manchester United, Tottenham Hotspur, Newcastle United, Hull City, Liverpool, Manchester City, Aston Villa, Everton, Chelsea and England in the headlines.
DAILY MIRROR: Joe Kinnear has pleaded with the FA not to ban him from the touchline again - after police ushered him away from the dug-outs yesterday as his side drew 2-2 with Everton at Goodison Park. Also: Liverpool went through ecstasy and agony y
esterday - celebrating a fabulous fightback from 2-0 down to 3-2 after a brace from Fernando Torres and Dirk Kuyt's last-gasp goal but losing Martin Skrtel with a serious knee injury.
THE TIMES: Michael Owen's future as an England player looked bleaker than ever last night after Fabio Capello excluded him from the squad for the World Cup qualifying matches against Kazakhstan and Belarus. Also: A fairytale and a nightmare continued yesterday as Hull City won in north London for the second time to leave Tottenham Hotspur marooned at the base of the Barclays Premier League and intensify questions over the future of Juande Ramos, the head coach.
THE GUARDIAN: Some days in football are just golden. For Liverpool, this was one of those rare occasions when everything came together and an admiring audience was left to wonder whether they might, after all, have the wit and gumption to sustain an authentic Premier League challenge rather than just flit around the edges. Also: Juande Ramos spoke in defiant terms last night after watching his Tottenham Hotspur team lose 1-0 at home to Hull City to prolong their dreadful start to the Premier League.
THE INDEPENDENT: There were recalls for Peter Crouch, Shaun Wright-Phillips and, surprisingly, Scott Carson in Fabio Capello's England squad named last night, but still no place for Michael Owen. Also: Manchester City's plans for world domination will have to be put on hold a little longer after a third defeat in four Premier League matches, suffered in archetypal fashion to Liverpool after Dirk Kuyt's late strike.
DAILY TELEGRAPH: The confusion surrounding the future of Newcastle United should be brought into sharper focus this week following reports that potential investors in the beleaguered Premier League club have been set a deadline of tomorrow to make their intentions known. Also: Martin O'Neill had arrived at the home of the Premier League pace-setters, believing his vibrant Aston Villa could actually win. After this chastening defeat, O'Neill admitted feeling "daft" at having the temerity even to dream that Chelsea might slip up.
DAILY EXPRESS: Tottenham will face a £15million bill if they decide to sack Juande Ramos after he insisted he will not quit.
DAILY MAIL: Even before yesterday's impromptu attempt at a dugout appearance, Joe Kinnear was facing the possibility of a fresh FA charge following last week's foul-mouthed outburst at journalists which the League Managers Association branded "unacceptable".
DAILY STAR: Michael Owen's England career was in tatters last night after being left out in the cold again by boss Fabio Capello who left the Newcastle striker out of his squad for the World Cup qualifying double-header with Kazakhstan and Belarus. Also: Spurs boss Juande Ramos saw his rock-bottom team slump to another defeat but claimed "If we carry on playing like this we will be okay," as he said he no intention of resigning after their 1-0 defeat to Hull at White Hart Lane.
THE SUN: Juande Ramos insists he will not quit Tottenham - even though his White Hart Lane flops are sinking faster than the Titanic as Geovanni fired a thunderbolt to earn Hull their and keep Spurs bottom of the table. Also: Newcastle have been warned by the Nigerians bidding to buy the club that "there are plenty of other Premier League sides who want to do business with us".

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