India captain Virat Kohli smashed a career-best 243 on his home ground, but it was Delhi's notorious smog which dominated discussion after Sunday's play in the third and final test against Sri Lanka.
The majority of the Sri Lankan players returned from the second day's lunch break wearing face masks as the seasonal haze affecting the region thickened over the Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium.
"It's well documented that Delhi has a high level of pollution," Sri Lanka coach Nic Pothas said afterwards, calling it a "unique case".
Umpires Nigel Llong and Joel Wilson were discussing the air quality with the tourists when Kohli declared India's innings on 536-7.
Sri Lanka, trailing 0-1 in the series, batted for 44.3 overs to reach 131-3 at stumps.
Pothas said a couple of his players vomited in the dressing room, but denied the tourists at any stage pressed for stopping the game.
"When it became unsafe, I think that's where the conversation started because the safety of the players is of paramount importance."
Delhi's government last month ordered schools temporarily shut after pollution readings in some places peaked at 500, the most severe level on the government's air quality index that measures poisonous particles.
India's bowling coach Bharat Arun, however, played down the issue.
"Virat batted close to two days, he didn't need a mask," he said, referring to the India captain's second successive double hundred in the series.
India head coach Ravi Shastri also entered the ground for a chat with the umpires.
"Ravi was pretty simple. He said 'please get on with the game, you don't need to stop'," Arun said.
"I think the umpires and the match referee have a job on hand and it's not up to the players to go and protest. They know what they are doing.
"When the play was unnecessarily being stopped, we just wanted to get on with the game because our focus is to win the Test match."
Arun was less than sympathetic to the Sri Lankans, saying it was "their problem to keep their bowlers fit" and denied India were forced to declare their innings.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with Reuters.)
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