LONDON, July 12: England, inspired by Darren Gough and Vikram Solanki, pulverised South Africa by seven wickets with almost 30 overs to spare in the one-day triangular series final at Lord’s on Saturday.

South Africa, who arrived in England ranked second only to Australia, were swept away in breathtaking fashion after being dismissed for 107 in 32.1 overs on a perfect track. No batsman reached 20.

It was South Africa’s lowest one-day score against England and the lowest ever by an international side at the home of cricket.

England — ranked seventh before the tournament but now up to third in the world rankings — then cantered home in 20.2 overs after Marcus Trescothick had departed for a duck.

The ease with which Vikram Solanki (50) and Michael Vaughan (30) dealt with the South African attack during a run-a-ball second-wicket stand of 87 underlined how comprehensively the touring side had been outplayed.

Solanki, who made a memorable century against South Africa earlier in the tournament, underlined the gulf as he picked Jacques Kallis up off the front foot to deposit him for six over square leg before driving him through mid-on to reach a 52-ball half-century.

South Africa never really recovered from an impressive opening salvo by man-of-the-match Gough and James Anderson.

The 32-year-old Gough, back in the England side after a year of injuries as the daddy of a fresh-faced pace attack, served up a master class in fast bowling as he removed South Africa’s two key batsmen, Herschelle Gibbs and Kallis, in the space of 15 balls.

Gibbs snicked behind after making nine and Kallis, averaging 314 at one stage in the tournament after consecutive centuries against England and Zimbabwe, departed for a duck as Gough completed his opening seven-over spell with figures of two for nine.

“I thought Gough set the tone for the day,” Vaughan said. “He didn’t give them any kind of width. Jimmy Anderson is an unbelievable talent as a wicket-taker but Gough at the other end held things back for us.”

Anderson, aged 20, produced a contrasting, erratic performance full of unplayable swinging deliveries and wides.

His display was best reflected in his dismissal of pinch-hitter Morne van Wyk, who struck him over mid-off and square leg for fours before being bowled by a classic off-cutter coming back up the Lord’s slope.

Anderson had also started the rout, having Graeme Smith dropped at point off his first legitimate delivery before dismissing him, caught at slip playing with a crooked bat, in his second over.

Like Gough, Anderson was rested after seven. His figures, however, did not bear any resemblance — 7-0-42-2, including five wides and six boundaries. He ended with three for 50.

Left-arm spinner Ashley Giles, having taken 0-168 in four earlier matches, bowled an attacking line round the wicket for once and took two for three. All-rounder Andrew Flintoff, the man-of-the-series, also took two cheap wickets while Chris Read took five catches behind the stumps.

England beat South Africa in three of their four meetings in the tournament.

Scoreboard

SOUTH AFRICA:

G.C. Smith c Trescothick b Anderson 7

H.H. Gibbs c Read b Gough 9

M. van Wyk b Anderson 17

J.H. Kallis c Read b Gough 0

J.A. Rudolph c Read b Flintoff 19

M.V. Boucher c Read b Johnson 11

M. van Jaarsveld c and b Giles 11

S.M. Pollock c Read b Flintoff 18

A.J. Hall c Vaughan b Anderson 0

A. Nel lbw b Giles 1

M. Ntini not out 0

EXTRAS (LB-1, W-10, NB-3) 14

TOTAL (all out, 32.1 overs) 107

FALL OF WKTS: 1-10, 2-30, 3-39, 4-43, 5-75, 6-75, 7-102, 8-103, 9-107.

BOWLING: Anderson 10-0-50-3 (5w); Gough 7-2-9-2 (3nb); Flintoff 6.1-0-18-2 (1w); Johnson 6-1-26-1 (2w); Giles 3-2-3-2 (2w).

ENGLAND:

M.E. Trescothick c Hall b Ntini 0

V.S. Solanki b Hall 50

M.P. Vaughan c Ntini b Nel 30

A. McGrath not out 15

A. Flintoff not out 6

EXTRAS (LB-1, W-7, NB-2) 10

TOTAL (for three wkts, 20.2 overs) 111

FALL OF WKTS: 1-1, 2-88, 3-89.

DID NOT BAT: R. Clarke, C.M.W. Read, A.F. Giles, R.L. Johnson, D. Gough, J.M. Anderson.

BOWLING: Pollock 5-1-17-0 (1nb); Ntini 5-1-24-1 (2w); Kallis 3-0-33-0 (2w); Nel 5-0-22-1 (1nb, 2w); Hall 2.2-0-14-1 (1w).

RESULT: England won by seven wickets.

UMPIRES: N.A. Mallender (England) and S.J.A. Taufel (Australia).

TV UMPIRE: J.W. Lloyds (England).

MATCH REFEREE: C.H. Lloyd (West Indies).

MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Darren Gough.

MAN-OF-THE-SERIES: Andrew Flintoff.—Reuters

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