Australia's top order is spluttering, but the middle-order engine room purred nicely on the third and, in the nick of time, final day in Barbados - as it has on numerous occasions in recent times to help the team out of trouble.
It does fuel the notion that such performances, along with the strength of the bowling attack, are papering over cracks, and a team with less brittle batting and better catching than
West Indies could have made them pay - like South Africa in the World Test Championship final - but that should not diminish what Australia were able to achieve at Kensington Oval.
While the result was comfortable for Australia, their position at the start of the day was anything but with a lead of 82. The performances of
Travis Head,
Beau Webster and
Alex Carey provided a big enough cushion of runs that they could attack with the ball without too many concerns and the trio, while playing largely against an older ball, belied how tricky the surface remained.
"I thought those three were brilliant,"
Pat Cummins said. "They kept the scoreboard ticking over. I thought they took really good options. They were always looking to score. Really, that was the difference. [You are] turning up today thinking that if we didn't get a big lead it was 50-50, really. Those guys took the game away from West Indies."
There was some luck, such as Head profiting from the seventh dropped catch of the match by West Indies, but they made it count. Head was named Player of the Match for his twin half-centuries and Carey produced some of the most free-flowing batting of the game, highlighted by stunning straight sixes off Jayden Seales and Justin Greaves. Yet, in many ways, given his inexperience at international level, it was Webster's innings that stood out most.
It was the second time in five Tests that he has made a half-century on a very tricky pitch after the debut effort against India at the SCG. He also nipped in with a brace of important first-innings wickets. Barbados was perhaps not quite as spiteful as that Sydney surface, but a batter always knew there could be one that misbehaves, as Head found out against Shamar Joseph and a few of the West Indians did later in the day.
At a time when so much attention is on
Sam Konstas and how he is attempting to learn as he goes at international level, it is worth noting that Webster has a decade of domestic experience under his belt and earned his chance by churning out runs and wickets in the Sheffield Shield. That isn't to say the route Konstas is taking - a youngster plucked out after a handful of games - won't eventually work, but Webster has seen and done plenty before moving up a level.
"I think it's pretty much the same as what he does for Tasmania," Cummins said. "He seems to always contribute in some way. He's kind of knocked down the door with his performances over the years in Shield cricket. It's great when you've got someone like that coming to the team. They know their craft so well and you saw that today, even on a tricky wicket, he knew where his areas to score were. He's been a fantastic asset to the team over the last six months."
Konstas, meanwhile, is being thrust into a new situation almost every time he bats. In this match, he was twice dismissed by deliveries angling back - once lbw and once bowled - to highlight a technical flaw that has been visible before. In the second innings, he became increasingly flustered trying to break the shackles, albeit Shamar Joseph bowled superbly to him.
"One of the hard things about playing Test cricket is you get thrown into different conditions all the time," Cummins said. "And you might not have the flying hours under your belt as a youngster coming in, so you've got to work out your craft on the bigger stage.
"What we'll keep working [on] with the young guys over the next little bit is: where are your options? Because that's probably the hardest thing when the pitch is doing a lot, is getting out of your little bubble, still trying to score and taking good options. You saw it today, how hard it can be to try and fire a few shots.
"Sammy, he tried a few different options yesterday. Not too many of them worked out, but full confidence [in him]."
When Webster fell, glancing down the leg side, the lead was nudging 200 and Carey, who had a superb 2024-25 season across formats, flicked a switch and took 14 off an over from Seales. There is a fine balance of risk and reward in Carey's batting; he was criticised for his missed reverse sweep against Keshav Maharaj in the World Test Championship final, but here he found the perfect balance.
"I went in before tea and try to get a bit of a feel for the wicket," Carey told ESPN. "I think when you see Travis Head not scoring at 90 strike rate you know it's probably a pretty tricky wicket. I was trying to get into my innings, and then just try to continue to put the bowlers under pressure. We lost Beau Webster and I thought my role was just to stay positive and try to keep the scoreboard ticking - the messaging today was, runs are going to be crucial, however you can get them."
Scoring runs however you can: it's something a few of Australia's top order will hope to be able to do in Grenada.
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo