Joe Sayers and Andrew Gale have given Yorkshire hope of a draw going into today's final day of the Roses match against Lancashire at Liverpool.

Aided by three-and-a-half hours of rain during the afternoon and evening sessions of yesterday's third day, the visitors have an unexpected opportunity to secure a draw despite being outplayed for the majority of the contest.

Sayers and Gale have accumulated an unbroken third-wicket partnership of 83 from 27 overs to advance Yorkshire's second innings to 131 for two.

The White Rose had started their second batting effort trailing by 188 runs and had fallen to 48 for two due to the loss of Adam Lyth and Joe Root.

But Sayers, who brought up his second 50 of the match when the players returned to the field at 5.40pm, and Gale steadied the ship against some more tight bowling on a slow and low pitch.

Lancashire captain Glen Chapple bowled five successive maidens at the start of the innings, but there is very little help for the pace bowlers.

Left-arm spinner Gary Keedy is expected to hold the key to a home victory today, but Sayers and Gale played him well as only 49.5 overs were possible yesterday.

Root, who scored 15, said: "It is by no means easy to bat when they bowl straight and make you play, but the guys who are in now can hopefully carry on and put us in a better position.

"It's always frustrating when it rains because you want to be out there playing, but there can be times when the weather works in your favour.

"This could be one of them."

Impressive Sayers, 51 not out off 146 balls, survived a fiery spell of short-pitched bowling from England's Jimmy Anderson at the start of the innings.

And Gale (47 no) looked fluent after the rain delay, scoring 31 of the 46 runs added before the close.

He hit successive boundaries off Chapple to record the pair's half-century partnership before driving Keedy through mid-off shortly after a streaker had run across the Aigburth square.

Lyth was caught and bowled by Chapple with a delivery that stopped in the pitch, leaving Yorkshire 13 for one in the eighth over, before Root was trapped lbw by Sri Lankan all-rounder Farveez Maharoof in the 21st.

Lancashire's first innings was earlier wrapped up for 329 within the first 11 balls of play.

Steve Patterson trapped Luke Procter lbw and bowled Keedy to finish with excellent figures of four for 51 from 24.5 overs. Lancashire had only managed to add two runs to their overnight 327 for eight.

n Yorkshire face Worcestershire at New Road in the Clydesdale Bank 40 tomorrow.

Anthony McGrath is not in the squad but Middlesbrough-born all-rounder Lee Hodgson has been named in the party for a match that Yorkshire have to win to keep their semi-final hopes alive.