TOM Fell and Tom Kohler-Cadmore both had a day to remember as relegated Worcestershire continued their dominance of their final LV= County Championship Division One clash with Middlesex.

Fell will resume on 167 not out and Kohler-Cadmore unbeaten on 97 as Worces - tershire opened up a lead of 231at New Road.

Fell completed 1,000 Championship runs in a season for the first time when he reached 87 and also became the youngest player to reach the landmark in Division One this summer.

Then the 21-year-old achieved his career-best score at Middlesex’s expense for the second time in 2015.

Kohler-Cadmore is within three runs of experiencing At that stage, Fell was unbeaten on 167 from 258 balls with a six and 25 fours and Kohler-Cadmore 97 from 187 deliveries with 11 fours.

Fell’s previous highest score of 143 had been registered at Uxbridge in June and he went past that with a top-edged pull for four off Toby Roland- Jones shortly after the second new ball had been taken.

It was one of his rare false strokes in a composed innings full of flowing drives which brought him his third Championship hundred of 2015.

Earlier, Worcestershire had resumed on 79-1 after dismissing Middlesex for 98 on the first day and Brett D’Oliveira (38) departed in the first over when he pulled Neil Dexter to mid-on.

Joe Clarke (12) looked in the joy of registering his maiden Championship and first-class hundred.

The former Malvern College pupil has taken his opportunity after Alex Gidman’s broken finger in fielding practice at Durham last week presented him with another opportunity.

Kohler-Cadmore, who is also 21, was pulled out of a second team game against Hampshire at Kidderminster and scored 89 at the ICG Emirates before being stumped.

Now he has followed up that performance with another responsible knock.

Fell and Kohler-Cadmore, who are flatmates, figured in an unbroken partnership of 219 in 59 overs before bad light intervened 2.1 overs after tea with Worcestershire on 329-3.

good nick but fell victim to a superb low catch by Ollie Rayner at second slip off Tim Murtagh in an over that cost by 14 runs.

But after that the Middlesex attack toiled without reaping any reward.

Meanwhile, Moeen Ali has been awarded his second central contract by England for the 2015-2016 period.

The Worcestershire all- rounder has become a regular member of the England side in all formats of the game since making his breakthrough in February 2014 in the West Indies.

Moeen played a key role in England regaining the Ashes this summer and is now gearing up for a hectic winter against Pakistan and South Africa before the ICC World T20 in India.