Ibrahim digs in as Sussex show some backbone at Scarborough
But they face a big task if they are to avoid defeat on day four of their Rothesay County Championship clash with Yorkshire.
All-rounder Matthew Revis scored a career best 152 not out as Yorkshire declared on 545 for nine midway through the afternoon, leading by 323 with 44 overs remaining in the day.
Sussex were 115 for three at close. Opener Daniel Hughes gave the visitors something to cheer with an impressive rear-guard 56 not out from 131 balls.
Ibrahim was challenged by head coach Paul Farbrace to improve on his wasteful performance at home to Essex last week but was out for nought in the first innings here.
He reached his 50 in the second innings with a three off the final ball of the day.
George Hill contributed a season's best 75 off 93 balls for Yorkshire.
Jack Carson plugged away with three for 150 from 43 overs but he was swimming against the tide.
Sussex started the day nicely by removing Harry Duke and Will Sutherland, leaving Yorkshire 320 for six in the 97th over, the day's seventh.
Duke was caught behind for 21 against an out-swinger from Fynn Hudson-Prentice - Sussex having taken the new ball immediately at the start of play - before Sutherland was bowled by his fellow Australian Gurinder Sandhu for two.
Revis became the first Yorkshire player to score three hundreds in successive first-class matches since Gary Ballance did it back in 2019 and the first non-capped White Rose player to achieve that same feat in 80 years.
Unfortunately for Sussex, further trouble was around the corner at the start of their second innings.
They faced 12 overs before tea, where they reached at 29 for three.
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New-ball pair Jack White and Matt Milnes struck once apiece added to the run out of Tom Alsop courtesy of a direct hit from Imam-Ul-Haq at the striker's end from cover.
White had Tom Haines caught and bowled off a lead edge and Milnes got James Coles caught at fourth slip for a golden duck the ball after Alsop had fallen in the sixth over.
But just when all seemed lost, left-handed Australian Hughes stood firm with the help of fourth-wicket partner Ibrahim.
Hughes was understandably watchful but drove, cut, pulled and deflected 10 boundaries en-route to a 114-ball fifty. The pair have shared an unbroken 95.

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