Manchester: Kraigg Brathwaite and Shamarh Brooks cracked patient half centuries as West Indies reached 227/4, still trailing England by 242 runs, at Tea on Day 4 of the second Test at the Old Trafford on Sunday.
Opener Brathwaite was dismissed on 75 off 165 balls (8x4) by Ben Stokes but his fourth wicket stand of 76 with Brooks helped the tourists get close to England's first innings score of 469/9d.
At the break, the Windies still needed 43 runs to avoid follow-on. Brooks was batting on 60 with Roston Chase (8 batting) for company.
The big talking point of the day was when on-field umpires were forced to disinfect the match ball after England's Dominic Sibley inadvertently applied saliva on the cherry -- the first instance since the new ICC regulations have come into play.
Before the start of the 42nd over of the visitors' innings, umpire Michael Gough was seen unwrapping a tissue and he subsequently rubbed it on both sides of the ball.
It was later revealed that Sibley had accidentally applied saliva on the ball and the home side brought the matter immediately to the notice of the umpires, who went ahead and sanitised the ball.
The International Cricket Council's (ICC) Cricket Committee chaired by Anil Kumble had earlier recommended banning the usage of saliva to polish the match ball in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.