ENGLAND skipper Eoin Morgan offered no excuses for the seven-wicket defeat to South Africa in the first one-day international in Cape Town as Bolton’s Matt Parkinson made his debut.

The tourists appeared rusty in their first ODI outing since winning the World Cup last summer, slipping to 131-6 after the Proteas asked them to make first use.

Joe Denly held the innings together with 87 and Chris Woakes weighed in with 40 to lift England to 258 for eight.

But that total proved nowhere near enough following a second-wicket stand of 173 between new 50-over captain Quinton De Kock and Temba Bavuma, who made 107 and 98 respectively, as South Africa took a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

Lancashire leg spinner Parkinson finished with 0-48 from his 8.4 overs.

Morgan said: “We were way off the mark.

“South Africa completely outplayed us in all departments. We’ve got no excuses, we didn’t adapt to conditions. Every batsman apart from Joe Denly and Chris Woakes failed to get going.

“Full credit to them, they’ve started the series very well. We lacked the adaptation to the skill level that was needed. We lost wickets in clusters, up until that Woakes and Denly partnership.

“Having let the guys get themselves in, it was a struggle to get things back.”

England retained only Morgan, Jonny Bairstow, Jason Roy, Joe Root and Woakes from the side who defeated New Zealand in last year’s final, handing Somerset batsman Tom Banton and Heaton’s Parkinson their ODI debuts.

While Woakes made an early breakthrough on his 100th ODI appearance, England’s seamers found little joy in taking pace off the ball – as their South African counterparts had done – and the decision not to include either Adil Rashid or Moeen Ali alongside fellow spinner Parkinson came back to haunt them.

Morgan added: “They learned a huge amount. Failure is a huge platform to try and catapult you forward and learn from your mistakes.

“It’s not all crash, bang, wallop. I think we need to continue to learn like we have done in the past....we were outplayed because we were off the mark.”

De Kock led the way in his first match as South Africa ODI skipper, hitting a fine century as his inexperienced side romped home with 14 balls to spare.