Article may be outdated

This article is 14 days old. Some details may have changed since publication.

Sky Sports·3 min read·medium

South Africa 45-21 England: Springboks show muscle in seven-try Nations Championship victory

J
Jack Wilkinson
South Africa 45-21 England: Springboks show muscle in seven-try Nations Championship victory
AI Summary

South Africa defeated England 45-21 in their Nations Championship rugby opener in Johannesburg. Despite a competitive first half, the Springboks dominated the second half to secure a convincing victory.

South Africa ran in seven tries in a brutal 45-21 victory over England in their Nations Championship opener in Johannesburg. <p>England were staring another ominous defeat in the face from the moment tries from Thomas du Toit, Cheslin Kolbe and Kurt-Lee Arendse saw the Springboks storm into a 17-point lead inside 12 minutes at Ellis Park.</p><p>England valiantly clawed themselves back into contention, reducing the deficit to three points by half-time after stunning solo finishes from prop Ellis Genge and lock George Martin.</p><ul><li><strong><a href="https://www.skysports.com/rugby-union/news/12321/13472169/nations-championship-fixtures-schedule-dates-key-info-about-rugbys-revolutionary-new-look-tournament">Nations Championship: All you need to know</a></strong></li><li><strong>Not got Sky? <a href="https://www.sky.com/tv/sports?dcmp=Ilc_skysports_nc_articlelink" target="_blank">Get Sky Sports</a> or <a href="https://www.nowtv.com/watch-sky-sports-online?DCMP=ilc_skysports_nc_articlelink" target="_blank">stream with no contract</a></strong></li><li><strong><a href="https://www.skysports.com/football/news/12110/10952996/sky-sports-push-notifications-faq-how-to-receive-the-alerts-you-want">Choose the Sky Sports push notifications you want</a></strong></li></ul><p>But South Africa ruthlessly reasserted their authority, with tries from Grant Williams and Jesse Kriel within 16 minutes of the restart.</p><p>A depleted England - reduced to 13 men after Tommy Freeman and Guy Pepper were shown yellow cards - were put further to the sword at the death by late scores from Malcolm Marx and Ben-Jason Dixon.</p><h3>Springboks strangle England at altitude</h3><widget id="1"></widget><p>Both sides suffered late withdrawals before a blow was even landed at Ellis Park. George Furbank's return for England was halted by appendicitis, with Marcus Smith drafted in at full-back, while South Africa lost talismanic captain Siya Kolisi and lock Eben Etzebeth right before kick-off.</p><p>Pieter-Steph du Toit deputised as captain in Kolisi's absence and his namesake, Bath prop Thomas du Toit, delivered lift-off for the Springboks, powering over for the opening score inside three minutes.</p><p>There was no respite for England as South Africa's brutal start and display of power continued. A trundling line break from prop Ox Nche ended with Kolbe, on his 50th Test appearance, side-stepping around Cadan Murley for the Springboks' second try in the sixth minute.</p> <widget id="2"></widget><p>South Africa's third visit into England's 22 yielded a third try, with Arendse breaking through Marcus Smith's tackle and dotting down in the corner to compound a sobering opening 12 minutes for Steve Borthwick's team.</p><p>But having weathered an almighty Springboks storm, England staged a stirring comeback to completely change the complexion of the Test match before the break.</p><p>After seeing captain Jamie George's try disallowed after he was adjudged to have gathered and grounded the ball at the base of a ruck from an offside position, England gave South Africa a taste of their own medicine.</p><p>A brutal display of strength saw Genge sit opposite number Du Toit on his backside before breaking through two tackles to apply the finishing touch to a stunning solo score from a tap-and-go penalty.</p> <widget id="3"></widget><p>And after Fin Smith's kick to touch on the cusp of half-time was ruled a 50:22, lock Martin was released down the left channel, where he bulldozed through Jasper Wiese and Kolbe for a converted try that slashed South Africa's lead to three points.</p><p>South Africa returned after the interval with renewed vigour and produced another devastating start to blow England away for the second time.</p><p>Scrum-half Williams threw a superb dummy to snipe over from the base of a ruck and establish a 10-point Springboks lead before Jesse Kriel crossed in the corner to stretch it to three scores.</p> <widget id="4"></widget><p>Coles crossed for England's third try with 12 minutes remaining, but two yellow cards in as many minutes for winger Freeman, for shoulder-to-head contact on Damian Willemse, and back-rower Pepper, for repeated penalty infringements, undid all of their hard work.</p><p>Hooker Marx then scored his 27th Test try from a driving maul before forward Dixon touched down for South Africa's seventh for the final word in a dominant Springboks display.</p><h3>'England will be a better team' - George</h3><p><strong>England captain Jamie George: </strong>"The overriding messages after were we showed a lot of fight and character to stay in the game, and then we let it slip at times.</p><p>"What we see at the top end - we're playing at the double world champions - is the game is fine margins.</p><p>"If we get into the sort of battle South Africa want - contestable kicking and capitalising on that - it's pretty hard to get out of it.</p><p>"We looked threatening at times, so it's just our ability to make sure we keep doing that. Genuinely, I think we will be a better team off the back of this experience."</p><h3>Springboks 'made themselves proud'</h3><p><strong>South Africa captain Pieter-Steph du Toit: </strong>"It was a tough game.</p><p>"That's the thing about England, we always know they are going to come back and won't stop fighting. We just had to keep to our plans and execute them to perfection.</p><p>"Unfortunately, we lost a bit of control in the second part of the first half, but by the end of the game we made ourselves proud."</p><h3>What's next?</h3><p>England return home to face Fiji at Everton's Hill Dickinson Stadium (2.10pm) before South Africa host Scotland in Pretoria (4.40pm) on Saturday, July 11.</p>

Continue reading on Headlinne

Create a free account to read the full article.

Read full article →
sports

Get the full story

Sign up for Headlinne to unlock AI insights, political bias analysis, and your personalized news feed.

Create free account

Already have an account? Sign in