The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Five in a row as Springboks leave England to suffer

SOUTH AFRICA 42 ENGLAND 39

- By Duncan Bech sport@sundaypost.com

England yesterday crashed to a fifth-successive defeat after a blistering start gave way to a dramatic collapse against South Africa at Ellis Park.

A scarcely-believable 24-3 lead had been amassed by the 18th minute, with George Ford acting as ringmaster as Mike Brown, Elliot Daly and Owen Farrell ran in superb tries.

But the match was turned on its head when Faf de Klerk orchestrat­ed a stunning firsthalf comeback supported by the brilliance of Willie le Roux that enabled South Africa to take a 29-27 lead into half-time.

The second half was dominated by the Springboks whose attack was overseen by De Klerk and Le Roux, but it was the boot of Handre Pollard that did most of the damage through three penalties.

It was the perfect celebratio­n of a landmark moment in South African history, after back-row Siya Kolisi had become the first black captain of their Test team.

England head coach Eddie Jones admitted poor discipline resulted in South Africa’s impressive comeback victory.

“It was a game we could have won,” he said. “I’ve never seen a better 20 minutes by a visiting side at Ellis Park in the first 20. Then our next 60 was a mixture of inconsiste­ncy, lack of discipline.

“We had a penalty count of 17-4 against us and it’s hard to win any Test match.

“I’m proud of the effort of the boys, but we need to fix that discipline.”

England could barely have made a better start as a monster 61-metre penalty by Daly was followed by a try that started inside their own 22.

Quick hands released Jonny May down the right wing with Ben Youngs in hot pursuit and several phases later, Brown was given sight of the line and he showed strength to shrug off two tackles and crash over.

South Africa came back hard, but, having been kept at bay, England struck again with Ford conjuring a superb try.

Henry Slade supplied an outrageous pass to Brown, but the move was all about Ford as he picked out May and with the overlap appearing it was a simple run-in for Daly.

Two minutes later and they were over again, Slade’s long pass giving May space and, with shell-shocked South Africa in disarray, he sent Farrell over under the posts.

But Nkosi’s charge to within inches of the whitewash was followed by the outstandin­g De Klerk spinning over.

On the half-hour mark it was game on when a Springbok attack down the right was revived through their tenacity, before De Klerk’s vision offered the lightning-fast Nkosi a half-chance.

The danger should have been averted, but Daly made a mess of gathering Nkosi’s grubber and the alert Sharks wing touched down.

The dream debut continued when he popped up on the opposite wing after a clever run from Le Roux created the space for fellow-debutant Dyantyi to send him over.

Le Roux then turned scorer from a scrum after De Klerk and Pollard, combined with Nkosi keeping his width, provided the platform for him to exploit a hole in midfield.

Two penalties from Pollard – the second won at a dominant scrum – opened up a five-point gap. It was worrying times for England, who were barely able to get their hands on the ball.

When they did counter through Tom Curry, a knock-on ended the attack and their frustratio­n was clear when Mako Vunipola followed through on De Klerk, earning a yellow card.

In the next play, South Africa had all but sealed the outcome when Dyantyi juggled the ball while crossing the line before touching down.

Maro Itoje and May got late tries, but Pollard’s boot mean the Springboks had done enough despite a nervy finish.

 ??  ?? Chris Robshaw is tackled by Faf de Klerk of South Africa yesterday
Chris Robshaw is tackled by Faf de Klerk of South Africa yesterday
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