Sam Whiteman’s second half century of the match led Northamptonshire’s resistance after a George Balderson century helped Lancashire cement control of the fixture.

The innings continues an excellent breakout season for Balderson who scored his maiden ton against Warwickshire in July and is currently averaging in the mid-sixties in red ball cricket.

With a destructive Tom Bailey blasting 77 off just 75 balls (seven fours, four sixes), Lancashire closed on 524, their highest ever score at Wantage Road, breaking a record that had stood for 88 years.

It gave the Red Rose an imposing lead of 292 and marked a remarkable comeback, one spearheaded yesterday by Josh Bohannon’s six-hour 175, with the last four wickets amassing a colossal 335 runs in 83.3 overs.

Sam Whiteman, playing his final match of the season for Northamptonshire before he returns to Australia, played an assured innings of 54. His 112-ball vigil ultimately ended when he played a ball from Will Williams (two for 26 from 14 overs). The hosts finished on 211 for five, still needing another 81 to make Lancashire bat again tomorrow.

Lancashire began the day on 392 for seven leading by 160, but soon lost Tom Hartley (28) who edged Jack White to first slip.

That though brought Balderson (83* overnight) together with Bailey in a partnership of 68. Balderson played sweetly off his legs and hit spinner Rob Keogh over deep midwicket for six. He eventually fell caught at midwicket, top-edging a sweep off Keogh. He had faced 234 balls and struck 14 boundaries and one six.

Bailey was positive from the outset, but after he was dropped in the deep on 41 and Balderson departed a few balls later, he went on the offensive smashing a further 35 from just 11 balls. He brought up his half-century with a six over deep midwicket off Taylor and sent the next delivery out of the ground before top-edging over the keeper to take Lancashire past 500. He finished the innings by striking Saif Zaib for consecutive sixes before he was bowled.

Emilio Gay and Hassan Azad started the innings brightly, Gay in particular finding fluency, playing an exquisite cover drive for four off Bailey and stroking him elegantly through midwicket. Bailey was then particularly fortunate to have Gay deemed to be LBW however, replays suggesting the ball had struck him well outside the line.

Fellow opener Hassan Azad dug in, taking two off-side boundaries off Balderson and clipping Williams through midwicket, but he departed for 30 when George Bell took a good low catch at short leg off left-arm spinner Hartley who was extracting some sharp turn out of the rough.

Northamptonshire were soon 82 for three when, after a string of ambitious LBW appeals, Williams was finally rewarded when Luke Procter was adjudged LBW to a ball that was likely sliding down the legside.

Whiteman was joined by Keogh in a 50-run stand either side of tea. After the interval, Keogh chanced his arm against Bailey but was rewarded with a flurry of boundaries. But on 29 he prodded uncertainly outside off-stump, Phil Salt taking a regulation slip catch to give Bailey his second wicket and leave Northamptonshire four down on 132.

Whiteman was looking increasingly confident, targeting Hartley, driving him through the cover for three boundaries, playing the reverse sweep and coming down the track to hit over long-on before he became Williams’ second victim of the day.

Saif Zaib (37*) was watchful early before finally finding the boundary when he cut and punched through the off-side. He showed some signs of wanting to attack but restrained his natural intent to pick off anything wide and rotate the strike.

Lewis McManus was content to play the anchor role at the other end, facing 65 balls for his  17* in an unbeaten stand of 46 with Zaib to ensure the pair will still be there in the morning.