None of the West Indies team at Chester-le-Street on Saturday had been involved in their side's recent 2-1 three- Test series defeat in England.
Instead Brathwaite and his men had arrived directly from the Caribbean Premier League Twenty20 tournament.
Conditions at the Riverside, the home of northeast county Durham, were always likely to prove challenging for a team used to the rather warmer climate back home in the West Indies.
Walton recovered, however, and he was behind the stumps as West Indies completed a 21-run win -- their 11th in 15 Twenty20 internationals against England, a sequence including last year's World Twenty20 final triumph in India.
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- Unsafe 'ultimatum' -
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But it almost did not happen after Walton's injury, with Brathwaite telling a post-match news conference: "I had a chat with a few of the boys in a huddle while Chadwick was getting treatment and most of them said it was unsafe.
He added: "We kind of gave it an ultimatum... We got the outfield roped and we were in agreement that if it continued to be unsafe or if anything dramatic or drastic happened we'd call it quits. But cricket was the winner."
Durham later revealed that three spectators were injured after falling on unstable flooring in the North East Terrace, with stewards evacuating the area as a safety precaution.
On the field, Chris Gayle (40) and heir apparent Evin Lewis (51) got West Indies off to a flying start with a rapid first-wicket stand of 77 before England, with Liam Plunkett and Adil Rashid sharing six wickets, held the tourists to 176 for nine.
But on Saturday he starred with the ball by taking three for 20 -- the 29-year-old Barbados all-rounder's best figures at this level.
"We knew we had to stick in it," said Brathwaite. "The way we finished the game was really fantastic."
- Morgan misses out -
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The key passage of play started when paceman Brathwaite bowled Alex Hales for a rapid 43.
Now white-ball skipper Morgan wants to see an improved showing from England's batsmen when a five-match one-day international series against West Indies starts at Old Trafford on Tuesday.
"It's the batting certainly," Morgan said. "We felt throughout the whole game it was a good wicket to bat on and to be chasing 177 we felt pretty confident at the halfway stage."
"My form is in and out all the time, it's not a huge concern but I'd like to score some more runs," he said.