Lunch
Australia 4-583
Voges 269*, M Marsh 1*
Tea
West Indies 4-81
D Bravo 32*, D Ramdin 1*
Key batsman
Darren Bravo: Before the Test, retired fast-bowler Ryan Harris wrote of how impressed he was by Bravo when he bowled to him in 2012, and how disappointed at how his career had stagnated since then. On another dark day for the West Indies, the form of the left-hander was something to savour. Bravo was solid in defence, vitally so given the plight of his team, but was also able to punish the few loose deliveries he was given. It would be wonderful for the 26-year-old to start living up to his potential. 
Key bowler
Nathan Lyon: Australia had already broken through, with the scalp of opener Kraigg Brathwaite, by the time Nathan Lyon got the ball. But with three wickets in his first seven overs he was the main reason the visitors were teetering at tea, at 4-81. Lyon's ability to get the ball to dip led to Rajendra Chandrika being caught at first slip. Of his two wickets in his seventh over, while the first was down to athleticism (a great return catch off Marlon Samuels), the second was down to bowling to his field, sucking Jermaine Blackwood into defending and providing an easy catch for Joe Burns at short-leg.
The moment
Despite there very nearly being an Australian-record partnership, it was trumped by a moment of brilliance from Nathan Lyon. The off-spinner produced a half-volley to Marlon Samuels that looked destined for the long-off boundary. But to the delight of Lyon's teammates, and also spectators, the bowler flung himself to his left and held on to a spectacular catch.
The numbers
449. Partnership of Adam Voges and Shaun Marsh. Had the latter's heave to deep mid-wicket been either side of Bravo they would have broken the Australian record of 451 by Bill Ponsford and Don Bradman.
94.38. Voges' strike-rate. Of the 347 times batsmen have reached 200, only seven have featured faster scoring, led by Nathan Astle's 222 off 168 balls for NZ against England in 2001-02.