England and South Africa denied series decider by rain

No play was possible at Trent Bridge.

By contributor David Charlesworth, PA Cricket Reporter
Published
Supporting image for story: England and South Africa denied series decider by rain
The third T20 between England and South Africa was washed out (Bradley Collyer/PA)

England’s T20 decider against South Africa proved a damp squib after unrelenting rain meant a washout at Trent Bridge.

Phil Salt’s unbeaten 141 – in which he recorded the fastest and highest T20 century by an Englishman – helped the hosts to a record-breaking 146-run win at Emirates Old Trafford on Friday to level the three-match series at 1-1.

South Africa won a rain-affected series opener at Cardiff on Wednesday but there was no prospect of a winner-takes-all showdown in Nottingham, where light rain started to fall shortly before the 2pm toss.

While captains Harry Brook and Aiden Markram emerged in their kits at 2:10pm, a toss was aborted as the shower grew heavier, and with no let-up the umpires decided to officially abandon the match at 4.20pm.