Normal service will be resumed with a traditional red ball and daylight play after both teams fought out a tension-packed pink ball day-night Test in Dubai, won by Pakistan by a narrow 56-run margin.
Pakistan dominated the first three days after scoring 579-3 declared, courtesy of opener Azhar Ali's epic career best 302 not out, and then dismissing West Indies for 357.
But leg-spinner Devendra Bishoo turned the match upside down with career best figures of 8-49 to wreck Pakistan for a paltry 123 in their second innings, giving West Indies a target of 346 to win.
It needed a leaping catch by leg-spinner Yasir Shah to dismiss Bravo for 116 and 26 runs later Pakistan wrapped up the match to take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.
"It will be tough. With the kind of confidence the West Indian batsmen have got, it will be difficult to get them out in the second Test," said Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq.
The pink ball -- used for the first time in the first-ever day-night Test between Australia and New Zealand at Adelaide last year -- did not help the bowlers in Dubai where excessive evening dew left it wet and soft.
Misbah admitted his team missed experienced left-arm spinner Zulfiqar Babab who was left out of the first Test.
"We did miss him," said Misbah. "The pink ball used to be unplayable when we used it in domestic matches in Pakistan but here it didn't work like that."
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