In reply to the visitors’ 328 yesterday, the home side closed the second day on 330 for two with Mousley on 112 from 141 balls (his first first-class century for Warwickshire) and Hain on 80 from 143 balls.

Day 2: Warwickshire, 330 for two, lead Surrey, 328 all out, by two runs.

An unbroken partnership of 178 in 44 overs between Mousley and Hain followed an opening stand of 116 between Rob Yates (70 off 117) and Alex Davies (58 off 81), as the Bears capitalised on a misfiring Surrey attack.

It was certainly a good toss for Warwickshire to win yesterday, enabling their seamers to bowl in cloudy, damp weather on the first morning. But while Surrey’s bowlers had much less help from the conditions, they did not help themselves. Too much loose fare was delivered, as illustrated by the Bears’ boundary count – 52 fours in 80 overs.

Surrey’s first innings having ended in the last over of the first day, Warwickshire’s began at the start of the second and their openers were soon making brisk progress. Davies, in his first match since relinquishing the captaincy, was especially fluent. He reached 50 from 71 balls with his 11th four, caressed through mid-wicket off Matt Fisher, and as the score hurried to 85 without loss after 21 overs, Surrey turned early to spin. It brought the breakthrough, though the openers had added 116 in 23 overs before Davies departed in disbelief after flicking Dan Lawrence off the middle of the bat straight to Ollie Pope at mid-wicket.

Yates, circumspect at first, gained rhythm as he reached his 16th first-class half-century (89 balls) but then edged Sean Abbott to Rory Burns at slip. It proved to be an isolated moment of joy in a barren afternoon for Surrey as Mousley and Hain concentrated diligently and waited patiently for the next loose ball to come along.

Mousley reached his half-century from 77 balls, Hain soon followed to his from 74.

With the seamers impotent, 18-year-old left-arm spinner Ralphie Albert was pressed into action rather more than envisaged and, on a pitch increasingly good for batting, he acquitted himself well. Surrey captain Rory Burns rotated his bowlers in vain, however, as Mousley and Hain batted with great discipline.

Mousley reached three figures from 123 balls, bringing up his century with his 17th four. The milestone was greeted by huge cheers from spectators delighted by the success of an immensely popular home-grown player.

Shortly after Warwickshire moved in front, bad light closed in to lop off the last 16 overs. The glory of three recent County Championship titles must have seemed light years away for the Surrey side as they toiled away fruitlessly in the cold Birmingham wind. The silver lining for them is the pitch which has matured into a very good one for batting. They may have to bat long and well on it to return south with a draw.

Warwickshire batter Rob Yates said:

“We couldn’t have asked for a better day. Every batter got a start and a bit more and we are all really pleased to see get Dan over the line for his first first class century for Warwickshire. He is a very proud Bear and that will mean the world to him. We were willing him on in the dressing room and you could tell by the roar that went up when he got there how much it meant to everybody in the crowd. It was a very special moment, 

“Hopefully he can come back tomorrow, fresh and ready to add some more runs and put us in a position from which we can push for victory. It was pleasing for myself and Alex to add some runs in the first session. I think that session was quite important because we saw how quickly wickets fell in the morning yesterday so it was pleasing to put on a century stand.”