The quality of the Barbados pitch has been widely criticised after another attritional day of cricket in the Caribbean.

This article is brought to you in association with Sportsbreaks.com who offer unforgettable sports travel experiences, including the Sportsbreaks.com Terrace for all England internationals and Vitality T20 Blast fixtures at Emirates Old Trafford. For more information click HERE

Kraigg Brathwaite batted for the majority of the day to finish with the longest innings (in terms of balls faced) by an West Indies batter since Brian Lara’s famous quadruple century at Antigua in 2004.

Not only did the England bowlers find wickets hard to come by but West Indies found scoring difficult on a pitch that offered little assistance for both bowlers or batters. At one point in the morning session, Brathwaite scored a solitary run over an entire hour.

In the end, West Indies were bowled out for 411 in the third session after having batted for a mammoth 187.5 overs.

The day made for difficult viewing with the majority of the blame aimed at the surface, with many voicing their frustration at the similarity between the pitches offered up at both Antigua and Barbados so far this series.

According to CricViz, using their ball-tracking based model that assesses conditions, “no Test series in the Caribbean has had flatter pitches than this one, since records began in 2006”.

James Coyne, the deputy editor of The Cricketer magazine, tweeted: “I love Test cricket above all but these two pitches have been bad for cricket and the format.”

He was far from the only person to criticise the pitch.

Earlier in the Test, West Indies quick Kemar Roach criticised the nature of not only the Barbados pitch but surfaces used for Test cricket around the Caribbean in recent times.