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England outclassed by seven-try South Africa in Nations Championship

BBC Sport rugby union news reporterPublished35 minutes agoNations Championship

South Africa (17) 45

Tries: T du Toit, Kolbe, Arendse, Williams, Kriel, Marx, Dixon Cons: Kolbe 5

England (14) 21

Tries: George, Martin, Coles Cons: F Smith 3

South Africa once again asserted their dominance over England with a commanding victory at Ellis Park, with the outcome rarely in doubt across 80 bruising minutes.

The Boks blitzed into a 17-point lead inside 11 minutes with England bewildered by the pace, muscle and cohesion of the hosts.

Powerful scores from Ellis Genge and George Martin, just before half-time, ignited a glimmer of hope for England.

But South Africa turned the screw after the break, scoring another three tries to canter to a fourth successive victory over England as the visitors came up well short of the gold standard set by the double reigning world champions.

England's Nations Championship campaign continues against Fiji at the Hill Dickinson Stadium in Liverpool on 11 July before heading back to the southern hemisphere to take on Argentina on 18 July.

Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Ollie Chessum finished the game as England captain with stand-in skipper Jamie George having been replaced by Luke Cowan-Dickie

England arrived at altitude in Johannesburg 10 days before kick-off with the aim of acclimatising early and catching the Springboks, whose last serious outing was seven months ago, cold.

While England lost full-back George Furbank with appendicitis in the hours before kick-off, South Africa also had to rejig their starting line-up with Eben Etzebeth and Siya Kolisi, keystones of the Bok pack, withdrawing late with injuries sustained earlier in the week.

But, despite the disruption, the hosts opened with a blizzard of attacking brilliance that left Steve Borthwick's side reeling.

With less than three minutes on the clock, prop Thomas du Toit, heading back to his homeland from Bath this summer, muscled through Ellis Genge and Ollie Chessum to score from close range.

Two minutes later, with England crumbling in collisions and their defence leaking line breaks, Cheslin Kolbe had acres of space out wide and duly left opposite number Cadan Murley groping at shadows with a jagging side-step.

On the opposite wing, Kurt-Lee Arendse held off Marcus Smith to dive over for a third try to make it 17-0 after just 12 minutes.

Ellis Park, filled to close to its 62,000 capacity after a late lowering of ticket prices, was gleeful. England, by contrast, were woeful.

Even when the visitors belatedly began to play, with Fin Smith and Ben Earl making yards and Jack van Poortvliet landing a daring offload, they couldn't make it stick on the scoreboard.

Captain Jamie George had a try chalked off, his opportunistic dot-down from close range ruled out for an accidental offside.

England stemmed the haemorrhaging of points at the other end, however - perhaps helped by some understandable Springbok complacency - and briefly crowbarred their way back into the contest.

Arendse's yellow card for a deliberate knock-on gave England a man advantage for 10 minutes, and, at the end of the powerplay, Genge barged through opposite number Thomas du Toit from a quick tap penalty.

Then, in the final play of the half, a neat three-phase strike play, with a long line-out followed by two blind-side thrusts, culminated in 20-stone second row George Martin, playing his first Test since the 2025 Six Nations, rampaging over Jasper Wiese and into the corner.

With Fin Smith landing the conversion, England were only three points adrift at the break. It was a margin that seemed implausible in the opening exchanges.

The Springboks restored sense soon after the restart.

Grant Williams, the hosts' electric running scrum-half, sniped through a sliver of a hole to break 20 phases of England goalline defence on 45 minutes, before Jesse Kriel strolled in after a smart offload from the excellent Damian Willemse to stretch South Africa's lead to 31-14.

England's discipline and accuracy were too shoddy a base to launch a second comeback though.

The penalty count against the visitors ramped up, with referee James Doleman pinging England nine times after the interval. Too often attacking kicks went uncontested and England's front row came under pressure at the scrum.

Henry Pollock, who has occupied column inches and mental space in South Africa in the build-up, was introduced to a chorus of jeers with a little over 20 minutes to go.

It was another replacement who had the greatest influence for England late on though, with Henry Slade hitting a superb line to set up a try for Alex Coles.

England were back within 10 points at that point, but two yellow cards in the space of two minutes - Tommy Freeman for a high hit on Willemse and Guy Pepper for an early tackle - put paid to their hopes.

It continued an ugly theme from England's Six Nations campaign earlier this year, in which their efforts were undermined by eight cards in five matches.

There was an inevitability to Malcolm Marx rumbling over at the back of a driven line-out against an understaffed England defence shortly after, and the home crowd serenaded their heroes with Neil Diamond and Coldplay hits before Ben-Jason Dixon crowned victory with a seventh score.

South Africa: Willemse; Kolbe, Kriel, De Allende, Arendse; Libbok, Williams; Nche, Marx, T du Toit, P-S du Toit (c), Nortje, De Villiers, Hanekom, Wiese

Replacements: Wessels, Steenekamp, Porthen, Van Staden, Dixon, Reinach, Esterhuizen, Moodie

England: M Smith; Feyi-Waboso, Freeman, Atkinson, Murley: F Smith, Van Poortvliet; Genge, George, Heyes, Coles, Martin, Chessum, Curry, Earl

Replacements: Cowan-Dickie, Obano, Opoku-Fordjour, Ewels, Pepper, Pollock, Mitchell, Slade

Read original at BBC News

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