Pink-ball Tests can be a lottery. This one hurt Test cricket
Starc's assessment was more measured, but by pointing to the extra seam movement on offer, gave a clue as to why batters found the going so difficult. Swing bowling, even at Starc's pace, at least gives the batter some chance to adjust for the movement. Deviation off the seam offers no such chance.
'The pink Kookaburra swings more ... the pink Dukes certainly seams more and for a longer period,' Starc said.
For all the difficulties of the night sessions, the most dramatic scenes of batting carnage unfolded in broad daylight when Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Scott Boland walked out to defend a fourth innings target of 204.
This was a case of West Indian batting poverty colliding with a motivated and well-calibrated Starc.
In the first innings, he had swung a few too many deliveries down the leg side while hitting the pads almost as often. Second time around he got his radar into precision mode, and what followed was clinical in its swiftness.
'Obviously being bowled out for less than 30 is quite embarrassing,' lamented the West Indian captain Roston Chase.
Before the game, the Caribbean side had given Starc a leg-up by dropping their seasoned opener Kraigg Brathwaite, who has never been a player with an attractive style but always knew where his stumps were. It's unlikely he would have shouldered arms as wretchedly as Kevlon Anderson.
The souped-up pink Dukes ball, a well-grassed pitch, a desperately poor West Indian top order and a fired-up Starc made for a perfect storm. It said much for the scenario that Australian captain and fast bowling spearhead Pat Cummins did not even need to mark out his run.
If there is a wider conclusion to be drawn from the chaos at Sabina Park, it is that the pink ball will never be more than a commercial earner in Australia and an occasional oddity for Test cricket elsewhere. Substituting a red ball for a pink ball in the event of bad light? Forget about it.
In fairness to Sutherland, the concept's biggest advocate, he never argued for the pink ball to be anything other than a useful value-add to Test cricket's bottom line in the right circumstances and conditions. Only 11 pink-ball Tests have been played outside Australia in 10 years.
'Not for one moment are we saying we want to play day-night cricket all the time that we play Test cricket,' Sutherland had said.
'At certain times of year in certain parts of the world, it is appropriate because you can capture greater audiences. When people work and kids are at school, it's an opportunity for more fans to have access to the game.'
Australia have played more pink-ball Tests than any team (14), and been victorious in every one of them. Its introduction may have been a commercial decision, but the pink ball has also become a performance advantage for Starc's generation.
Ten years on, Starc's views have mellowed rather more than the sting of his bowling.
'I've softened the stance on it,' he said.
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'I still think it's one you want to be careful of – you don't want to overdo what it is. It's a great product in Adelaide. I'm still a traditionalist – I still very much love the red-ball game – but I've grown to see a place for it.'
A place for the pink Kookaburra maybe. But as one Australian team member quipped after Jamaica, this particular pink Dukes ball may need to go on the 'banned list'.

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