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Home»Politics & Governance»England clinch dramatic 27-26 win over South Africa at Twickenham
Politics & Governance

England clinch dramatic 27-26 win over South Africa at Twickenham

King JajaBy King JajaNovember 21, 2021No Comments0 Views
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England clinch dramatic 27-26 win over South Africa at Twickenham
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Marcus Smith celebrates victory
Marcus Smith marshalled England’s backline well from fly-half before landing the match-winning kick
England (17) 27
Tries: Tuilagi, Steward, Quirke Cons: Smith 3 Pen: Smith 2
South Africa (12) 26
Try: Mapimpi Pen: Pollard 5, Jantjies, Steyn

England signed off on 2021 in style as they outfoxed and outfought 2019 Rugby World Cup final conquerors South Africa in front of a rapturous Twickenham crowd.

England had leapt out to a 17-6 lead midway through the first half as Manu Tuilagi and Freddie Steward crossed for the hosts.

But Handre Pollard’s boot kept the Boks in the fight as they turned the screw after the break.

Raffi Quirke finished off an incisive attack for England, but the world champions’ mix of rock-solid mentality and physicality seemed to have won it when Makazole Mapimpi went over out wide on 69 minutes.

However, England fought to the death, as head coach Eddie Jones predicted they would have to, and fly-half Marcus Smith held his nerve to slot the decisive penalty in the 79th minute.

After a miserable fifth-place finish in the Six Nations earlier this year, the scalp of the world number ones and world champions is the biggest validation yet of the head coach’s tactical reboot.

As Smith finally booted the ball dead after a nerve-jangling wait for referee Andrew Brace to rule on an aerial contest in the shadow of England’s posts in the final passage of play, it felt like a landmark win.

One that points the way away from 2019’s defeat in Yokohama and towards the promise of what might be in France in 2023.

England beat the best

Siya Kolisi
South Africa captain Siya Kolisi saw yellow, with England replacement prop Will Stuart also going to the bin in the second half

England tore into their opponents in the first half, with a performance that buzzed with energy, invention and no little confrontation.

The eagerly awaited first scrum skirmish ended with England tight-head prop Kyle Sinckler grinning widely at opposite number Ox Nche and referee Brace’s arm aloft to indicate a penalty to the hosts.

Jamie Blamire’s first line-out as England’s starting hooker was a clever trick play, bulleted to a grounded Maro Itoje inside the Springbok 22m.

The breakthrough try arrived shortly after as Smith and centre Henry Slade’s quicksilver hands beat the Boks’ blitz and gave Tuilagi a run into the corner that the covering Pollard was never going to stop.

South Africa arrived at Twickenham with the summer’s Lions series victory still fresh in the memory. However, they have looked vulnerable at times in 2021 to a backline that can outflank their defence.

Australia beat them twice in a week back in September with the canny Quade Cooper at the wheel, while Finn Russell’s eye for space frequently opened them up against Scotland at Murrayfield last weekend.

Even when England’s front row were crumpled at a scrum on halfway, Blamire’s hook and Ben Youngs’ smart pass moved the ball away fast to create the hosts’ second try, with Smith, Slade and Steward freeing Max Malins, on in place of the injured Tuilagi, to scamper down the left wing.

South Africa covered back without fully recovering and Steward made the most of his 6ft 5in frame to punch over from short range.

When Smith kicked a penalty for a 17-6 lead after 24 minutes, England’s brave new world seemed almost surreal. Swing Low rang round the stands, the opposition were on the ropes and the hosts were crowing.

But it was never going to be so easy for long.

Pollard’s boot, although far from perfect, chipped away at the lead, and the introduction of Vincent Koch, Malcolm Marx and Steven Kitschoff – the fabled ‘Bomb Squad’ front row replacements – seemed to sap England’s belief.

Pollard slotted another penalty to sneak South Africa to 17-15 – just two points behind – with 25 minutes remaining.

England’s scrum was suddenly stuck in reverse and South Africa, who have trailed in their past seven Tests, came on strong.

But such situations are the crucibles in which teams are bonded and names made.

England’s young stars stood up. Malins threw himself under the wheels of a driven maul to hold up South Africa over the line before Quirke’s superb supporting line took him under the posts from Joe Marchant’s break.

Mapimpi’s score and Frans Steyn’s penalty seemed to have finally squeezed England out of the contest, but, as tempers frayed and lactic burned, the hosts landed the final punch.

South Africa infringed on the floor at the end of a scrappy passage of play and, with 15 seconds left on the stadium clock, Smith kept his cool from straight in front to bisect the sticks.

Man of the match – Freddie Steward

Freddie Steward
The breakout star of England’s autumn. Steward, still only 20, was superb in the air, brave in the tackle and a potent attackign threat

‘A special occasion and a famous win’ – analysis

BBC rugby union correspondent Chris Jones:

“This was a special occasion at Twickenham, with the muted indifference of the Australia match last weekend replaced by a crackling atmosphere as England thrilled the crowd with three great tries on the way to pulling off a famous win.

“In the second half England looked broken; they were leaking penalties at an alarming rate, bossed at the breakdown and in the scrum, and couldn’t win a line-out, so will all that in mind this was a significant victory for Eddie Jones’ men.

“Although Jones constantly refers to the World Cup in 2023, there is loads of rugby to play before then. The Six Nations is shaping up to be another fascinating tournament – with Jones facing a number of intriguing selection dilemmas as he looks to blend the old guard with the new.”

Line-ups

England: Steward; Marchant, Slade, Tuilagi, May; Smith, Youngs; Rodd, Blamire, Sinckler, Itoje, Hill, Lawes (capt), Underhill, Curry.

Replacements: Dolly, Marler, Stuart, Ewels, Simmonds, Dombrandt, Quirke, Malins.

South Africa: Le Roux; Kriel, Am, De Allende, Mapimpi; Pollard, Reinach; Nche, Mbonambi, Nyakane, Etzebeth, De Jager, Kolisi, Smith, Vermeulen.

Replacements: Marx, Kitshoff, Koch, Mostert, Wiese, H Jantjies, E Jantjies, Steyn.

Referee: Andrew Brace (Ireland)

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