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South Africa saw off England with a 16-15 win on a grim Saturday at Twickenham, with a late rally from the hosts seeing them fall short.
Three penalties from Pat Lambie and a bizarre try from Willem Alberts handed the visitors the win, with Toby Flood and Owen Farrell accumulating five penalties between them.
England dominated territory and possession but were naive in attack, lacking direction and depth which made matters simple for the Springboks defence. Too often forwards were found in midfield when England needed a clinical line-breaker. The fact that Tom Youngs was the most effective Red Rose attacker said it all.
An interception break from Manu Tuilagi in the second half summed up their troubles perfectly; Chris Ashton choosing to not back his pace and ultimately seeing England plod forward into another turnover.
South Africa on the other hand were more patient, clinical and superior without anywhere near the same amount of possession - executing to greater effect when inside opposition territory in a replica performance from their victory over Ireland weeks earlier.
Controlling the line-out, they were spearheaded by the excellent Eben Etzebeth and made better use of their kicks to pin England back. Their scrum was also in the ascendancy as time ticked away, gaining the upper hand and reversing England's dominance from the first half.
Mike Brown's clean break in the opening minutes gave England valuable territory, with Toby Flood eventually converting a penalty after South Africa went offside near the posts.
Lambie tied the scores with his first kick of the afternoon but England regained the lead with a penalty from the game's first scrum, Flood returning to the field after being checked for concussion to grab the points.
A knock-on from Zane Kirchner inside his own 22 handed England an opportunity at the scrum - the returning Alex Corbisiero getting the edge over Jannie du Plessis - only for Flood to miss the simple kick wide to the right.
Persistent South African pressure in England's red zone then yielded a penalty for Lambie to give the visitors the lead for the first time at 6-9.
A fine offload from Joe Launchbury released Flood before Alex Goode burst upfield to bring Twickenham onto it's feet. But the chance was wasted after a grubber kick from Flood dribbled beyond the dead ball line. Key defence at the breakdown then helped both teams clear their lines before half-time.
The Springboks started the second half with a bang and after setting up camp in the England 22 scored a bizarre try. Ben Youngs' box kick ricocheted forward off JP Pietersen, with Tom Wood fumbling the ball which dropped into the hands of Alberts who burrowed over for the opening try.
Farrell replaced a wayward Flood and drew England within seven points with a penalty after 60 minutes and then added another as the match went into the closing stages, giving England a chance as they moved within four points.
Faced with a tough decision inside Springbok territory with two minutes left, Farrell brought England within a single point with another penalty kick rather than opting for the corner. Unable to win the restart, South Africa closed out the match and remain unbeaten in November.
Man of the match: One big performance from Eben Etzebeth, dominant in the skies and a joint top tackler with 16.
Moment of the match: England may well regret their decision for points over the corner as the clock ran out.
Villain of the match: Aimless kicking. It entertains nobody and transforms games from spectacles to duds.
The scorers:
For England:
Pen: Flood 2, Farrell 3
For South Africa:
Try: Alberts
Con: Lambie
Pen: Lambie 3
England: 15 Alex Goode, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Manu Tuilagi, 12 Brad Barritt, 11 Mike Brown, 10 Toby Flood, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Ben Morgan, 7 Chris Robshaw (c), 6 Tom Wood, 5 Geoff Parling, 4 Joe Launchbury, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Tom Youngs, 1 Alex Corbisiero.
Replacements: 16 David Paice, 17 David Wilson, 18 Mako Vunipola, 19 Mouritz Botha, 20 James Haskell, 21 Danny Care, 22 Owen Farrell, 23 Jonathan Joseph.
South Africa: 15 Zane Kirchner, 14 JP Pietersen, 13 Juan de Jongh, 12 Jean de Villiers (c), 11 Francois Hougaard, 10 Pat Lambie, 9 Ruan Pienaar, 8 Duane Vermeulen, 7 Willem Alberts, 6 Francois Louw, 5 Juandré Kruger, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Jannie du Plessis, 2 Adriaan Strauss, 1 Gurthrö Steenkamp.
Replacements: 16 Schalk Brits, 17 Heinke van der Merwe, 18 Pat Cilliers, 19 Flip van der Merwe, 20 Marcell Coetzee, 21 Elton Jantjies, 22 Jaco Taute, 23 Lwazi Mvovo.
Referee: Nigel Owens (Wales)
Assistant referees: Glen Jackson (New Zealand), Peter Fitzgibbon (Ireland)
Television match official: Jim Yuille (Scotland)
By Ben Coles at Twickenham
@bencoles_








Comments
JayStarr says...
I wished Robshaw or Vermeulen would've smacked that obnoxious interviewer...
As for that "freakish" try: I don't care if the entire Springbok team were offside and it was awarded to us - we bloody deserved it. Nigel Owens was INEXCUSABLY TERRIBLE. The worst performance by a referee I have seen since that notorious WC semi-final... He was so blatantly biased against South Africa (as he was in our WC game against Samoa) it became FARCICAL!
It is absolutely UNACCEPTABLE that someone who has the same passport as one of the teams on the field is refereeing the game ! And he clearly does not like South Africa or South Africans - just look at how blatantly biased he was against Jannie du Plessis in the scrums and then Eben Etzebeth in a situation where he was CLEARLY the victim !
Nigel Owens should be cited for the way he treated Etzebeth after that incident of thuggishness AGAINST him... And Eben should be awarded for staying as calm as he did in that situation. First being choked by the England player, then having 5 English players jump him (which included a clear swinging arm which connected) when he "dares" to push the guy choking him, then having someone else choke him on the ground, before Nigel Owens talks to him like he's the sh*!t of the earth and then penalises him ! I hope Owens watches that replay and reliases what an IDIOT he was and calls Etzebeth to apologise.
Well done Boks - you beat a British team and a British ref. I hope the IRB makes sure this situation does not happen again.
Posted 17:17 24th November 2012
TVaddict says...
How many f-ing terrible decisions can one team make? How many try scoring opportunities can one team mess up like a bunch of amateurs? Do these players know how to pass, or draw a defender or run a line?
I'm not just talking about Robshaw's decision at the end, I'm talking about Flood kicking the ball away when we're in a good position, Youngs constant woeful kicking to their back three, and Ashton choosing to throw a terrible pass far too early. What happens to these players to turn them from young attacking stars to slow bad kicking idiots? I don't think I've ever got so angry at watching someone kicking a ball.
That all said, there are so many positives to take from this game. We matched the Springboks in the forwards and bested them in the scrum to such an extent they became afraid of it. That is one of the impressive feats a set of forwards can achieve. We competed immeasurably better at the breakdown, and when players like Tuilagi and Brown attacked they were able to find holes. Launchbury, Wood, Corbisiero, Tom Youngs, Haskell, Tuilagi were all fantastic.
Things that need to change. Ashton has to go, he's looking slow, drops the ball more times than the rest of the team combined, and seems to offer nothing in attack. Flood needs to go, he's had so many opportunities and he never gets any better. He's meant to be there for his creative influence but England have never looked so poor in attack, his tactical kicking has been continually poor, and he can't even kick goals reliably. Youngs is still looking off the pace so I'd have Care starting but to be honest neither is playing well.
Things that need to be sharpened up. The restart, no longer can we score and then immediately give away a penalty because of a poor restart. The lineout needs to become more consistent. OUR KICKING MUST IMPROVE. Our attacking lines and decision making must get better.
Posted 17:16 24th November 2012
jappers1983 says...
Saw nothing wrong in taking the three points. The error was in not knocking on the re-start. South Africa also have a superb line-out so that option would always be incredibly high risk, plus the likelihood of actually scoring from that line-out were remote (the stats speak for themselves).
The best option of the three, considering the position on the pitch, would have been the scrum. England had an excellent platform from it throughout the game and also won penalties directly from South Africa's front row. Not sure why this option is always neglected.
My main bug with Lancaster though is his criminal underuse of Jonathan Joseph. He offers so much more than Barritt (although I do rate Barritt, Joseph is a better all round player), and offers something beyond "head down and take contact". We shall see what happens next week.
Posted 17:07 24th November 2012
joekridge says...
Great defence from the boks...ref Nigel Owens had a shocker. All 50/50 calls went against sa. you could see he only had one eye on the boks making mistakes. England were very unlucky however.
Posted 17:04 24th November 2012
LondonWasp says...
improvements were visible but again, like in the Australia game, England fumbled when they were in perfect try scoring oppotunities. very fustrating
Posted 16:56 24th November 2012
letsgoboks says...
bummer... And the AB's next...
It's not all despair for the England rugby team. I mean... they managed to beat the mighty Fijians on this tour. That was a 'ruthless', 'faultless' and 'intelligent' affair!
Now back to reality. The Boks were terrible. They need to raise their standards because this is just not good enough. I don't care what time of the season it is and where they are playing. JDV is not the answer for captain. Ruan must head back to the northern hemisphere and play his rugby there. Jannie is not test level any more.
Posted 16:54 24th November 2012
melkdave says...
Just how unlucky are England atm,should have won today by a clear margin,should have won last week ,but alas not tobe.But alot of improvement today from England dominated the SA forwards in the loose and scrum.I wonder have SA ever been afraid to scrum before in a match ??Again the exacution and precsion not quite there ,in bad conditions,but its comming SLOWLY but getting there .T.Flood didnt have his best game today ,if he had made those early pens then different game altogether.Overall England have shown they ae a top team ,now just have to put the points on the board .Still optomistic for the 6Ns and 2015 ,as they are very inexperianced and green atm ,.We have made alot of progress in less than a year ,and i feel it will continue .
Posted 16:50 24th November 2012
capebacon says...
So let the excuses begin, bizarre, ridiculous, lucky, ludicrous, fortunate try ... heard it all so far ! Fact is England when you choose to blindly kick the ball on your own try rather than pick it up and play the contact you will risk a try like that.
Just face it you blew a perfectly good opportunity to win that game , hihihihi !
Posted 16:48 24th November 2012
BokAvenger says...
Well done to the Boks for beating 16 men. Nigel Owens put on his best Bryce Lawrence impression, ignoring Corbisiero's inward scrummaging all day and England players with their hands all over the ball at ruck time. And I knew England had a lot of Saffas playing for them but I didn't realise Robshaw was one of them - thanks for that last minute penalty call boet. The biltong is in the post. Ha, ha, ha, ha ha!
Posted 16:47 24th November 2012
martinmarais78 says...
Daaikak (Daibok), did you enjoy that in your England shirt with our England buddies?
Boks, were lucky...
Posted 16:47 24th November 2012
rugby_lord says...
Did the paint dry already???
Posted 16:46 24th November 2012
carpelone says...
England was never going to win it.
Gutted with the Boks' attitude to try to control instead of finishing games off.
Centres do not see much ball as usual, would like to see JP at 13, to open that outside gap.
Posted 16:42 24th November 2012
FISH says...
a win is a win.......poor discipline from the boks almost cost the game......we didnt adapt to walsh's interpretation well enough, and what the hell was robshaw thinking???? no guts no glory, he who dares wins......... he learned that the hard way today
Posted 16:41 24th November 2012