Northamptonshire 142 (Stone 4-39) and 19 for 0 (Curran 10*, Gay 9*) trail Warwickshire 369 for 8 (Bresnan 105, Yates 88, Thomson) by 208 runs
Tim Bresnan's debut century tightened Warwickshire's hold over Northamptonshire on the second day of their opening Bob Willis Trophy fixture at Edgbaston.
Bresnan, signed from Yorkshire earlier this summer, emulated the man whose experience he has been recruited to replace at Edgbaston, Jeetan Patel, by scoring a ton in his first knock for the Bears.
The former England all-rounder's compact 105 from 209 balls lifted Warwickshire to 369 for 8 after 120 overs, the point at which a first innings must close in the Bob Willis Trophy. That meant a commanding first innings-lead of 227, Northamptonshire having been bowled out for 142 on the first day, and represented a strong recovery from a vulnerable 85 for 4.
The innings was glued together early on by 20-year-old Rob Yates who displayed great composure, judgment and technique on his way to 88. Yates and Bresnan added 79 in 39 overs to stabilise the innings before Bresnan and Alex Thomson, who reached 46 off 85 balls, took a toll on a tiring attack to put on 104 in 28 overs and to build what should be a match-winning lead.
In seven overs before the close, Northamptonshire at least avoided damage, reaching 19 without loss, a commendable effort by openers Ben Curran and Emilio Gay after a long, hot day in the field.
Warwickshire resumed on the second morning on 130 for 4 and added 11, taking the stand of Yates and Michael Burgess to 56 in 20 overs before Burgess lost his off-stump to a fine in-ducker from Ben Sanderson.
That brought in Bresnan and, against the same opposition as when he made his Yorkshire debut 17 years earlier, the 35-year-old made an immediate match-shaping impact. While Yates, leaving the ball astutely and deploying endless patience, played the perfect anchor role, Bresnan worked the ball around wisely to reach his half-century from 110 balls.
Yates finally fell when, into his sixth hour of batting, he succumbed to his first loose shot, a drive at Jack White which ended in the hands of Gay at third slip. Yates, a product of the Warwickshire academy, was disappointed to miss out on his second first-class century but could take plenty of satisfaction from having turned an uncertain position for his team into one of control.
Thomson then arrived to produce the most attractive batting of the match so far, timing the ball beautifully before become the third victim of the persistent Nathan Buck.
Bresnan reached his ton from 203 balls and, after he was bowled by Rob Keogh, the spinner finally tasting success in his 31st over, Olly Stone punished his former team-mates with a merry unbeaten 36 from 30 balls, including five fours and a six.