RESULT
2nd ODI (D/N), Lord's, September 04, 2025, South Africa tour of England
(50 ov, T:331) 325/9

South Africa won by 5 runs

Player Of The Match
85 (77)
matthew-breetzke
Report

Breetzke stars as South Africa seal series in five-run thriller

England's poor 50-over form continues as South Africa claim first ODI series win in country since 1998

Matt Roller
Matt Roller
04-Sep-2025 • 15 hrs ago
Matthew Breetzke goes on the attack as South Africa pile on the runs, England vs South Africa, 2nd ODI, Lord's, September 4, 2025

Matthew Breetzke went on the attack as South Africa posted an imposing 330 for 8  •  AFP/Getty Images

South Africa 330 for 8 (Breetzke 85, Stubbs 58, Archer 4-62) beat England 325 for 9 (Root 61, Buttler 61, Bethell 58, Burger 3-63) by five runs
Matthew Breetzke had not been born when South Africa last won a bilateral ODI series in England. However, by extending a remarkable start to his career in the format, he helped them clinch this one with a match to spare. On his return from a hamstring injury, Breetzke hit 85 to underpin South Africa's total of 330, before their bowlers closed out a tense final-ball win under the floodlights.
Breetzke, 26, was born five-and-a-half months after South Africa's 2-1 triumph in the 1998 Texaco Trophy but will now lift the series trophy in Southampton on Sunday after his team took an unassailable 2-0 lead at Lord's. Unlike in Leeds, England at least competed but none of their three half-centurions - Joe Root, Jacob Bethell and Jos Buttler - kicked on past 61.
The chase went down to the final ball, which Jofra Archer needed to hit for six to take the game into a Super Over. But his inside-edged hoick off Senuran Muthusamy brought only a single and South Africa were deserving winners, backing up the thrashing they inflicted on Tuesday with a clinical, calculated performance.
This was an eighth defeat in 11 ODIs for England in 2025, and their captain Harry Brook refused to blame fatigue after an exhausting summer. "In my eyes that's just an excuse," he said. We're good enough and fit enough to be able to keep playing for the time being... Chasing 6.5 an over from ball one is a tough task. But that's exactly why we've picked this side: we've a long batting order. To get within one blow of that score is a really good effort."
South Africa had been stuttering at 93 for 3 after 19 overs when Tristan Stubbs joined Breetzke, but a fourth-wicket partnership of 147 off 126 balls laid a strong foundation before Dewald Brevis' cameo launched them towards 300. They fell four runs short of the record ODI total at Lord's, which has stood since the 1975 World Cup, but this was clearly a fighting effort.
Breetzke's innings was the highest by a South African in an ODI at Lord's, and he achieved the unprecedented feat of passing 50 in each of his first five innings in the format. By the time he fell 15 runs short of a second hundred, he had taken his ODI aggregate to 463 and executed South Africa's clear plan to put England's part-time spinners under severe pressure.
England got away with picking only four frontline bowlers in their 3-0 win against West Indies in June, but South Africa were merciless in targeting Bethell and Will Jacks; with Root curiously unused, they returned combined figures of 1 for 112 from their 10 overs. Brevis was particularly severe on Bethell, hitting him for consecutive sixes, while Stubbs laid into Jacks.
The margin of victory obscured the fact South Africa were ahead of the game from the moment Nandre Burger had Jamie Smith caught behind off the first ball of the chase. Root dominated the scoring in a second-wicket stand of 66, with Ben Duckett desperately out of form at the other end; his dismissal for 14 off 33, bowled reverse-sweeping Keshav Maharaj, was a mercy kill.
Where Duckett looked exhausted by his non-stop summer, Bethell had been short on time in the middle and was pushed up to No. 4 to take on South Africa's two left-arm spinners. Temba Bavuma responded by bringing on Aiden Markram's offspin, but Bethell slog-swept and pulled sixes as his two overs cost 27 runs.
He brought up a 28-ball half-century by launching Burger over mid-on, five balls after Root had cruised to his own off 57. But they fell in quick succession, too: Bethell sliced the relentless Corbin Bosch to backward point, and Root was beaten in the flight by Maharaj to be stumped in an ODI for the first time in a decade.
Brook and Buttler added 69 for the fifth wicket, launching sixes off Bosch and Muthusamy respectively. But Muthusamy found extra bounce to have Brook chipping to cover, and despite Buttler's outrageous reverse-slap for six on his way to 50 - a landmark he celebrated with a look to the skies after his father's recent passing - the required rate climbed past nine an over.
The game looked as good as won when Lungi Ngidi flummoxed Buttler with a dipping slower ball, and Burger removed Jacks and Brydon Carse in the same over to leave 40 required off the last three. Despite Archer's best efforts - with two lusty sixes and a pair of reverse-slaps for four - they always looked like falling short.
It looked like an important toss when Brook put South Africa into bat, with the start delayed by 15 minutes after a morning of heavy showers. Archer and Saqib Mahmood - recalled at Sonny Baker's expense - both found extravagant seam movement early on, but Markram and Ryan Rickelton were equal to it, adding 73 for the first wicket.
Rickelton fell for 35, top-edging Archer behind to Buttler, before Adil Rashid struck twice in quick succession, with Bavuma done on the outside edge and Markram furious with himself after chipping back a return catch on 49. But that only brought Breetzke and Stubbs together, whose partnership took the game away from England - and they never quite recovered.

Matt Roller is senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98

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