Ibadulla, who is a highly-regarded cricket coach, did not single out any particular team or bowlers for special attention.
He preferred to lump them all in the dreadful category.
"During the test match we had everything. We had long hops, we had half volleys, we had full tosses on leg stump," Ibadulla lamented.
"At test match level you don't expect seam bowlers to bowl like that. In my opinion the standard never reached test match level."
Ibadulla reserved praise for the bowling of New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori, who was in a class of his own.
The left-arm spinner took six for 56 to pick up his 18th five-wicket haul in test cricket.
"He gets people out because he is always testing the batsman's defensive skill and attacks the stumps."
That was something the seamers on display failed to do often enough, Ibadulla said.
Aside from Vettori and Kyle Mills, who netted a decent return of three for 64 from 24 overs, the New Zealand attack was largely impotent.
Iain O'Brien picked up the other wicket to fall but Mark Gillespie, who was a shock inclusion at the expense of Chris Martin, had a torrid test, with figures of none for 102 from 21 overs.
His Wellington team-mate, James Franklin, did not fare much better.
Franklin would have taken the new ball but with Mills replacing Jacob Oram on the eve of the test, he was demoted to a change bowler.
His tally of none for 61 was far from impressive.
The West Indies four-pronged pace attack also had its moments.
Daren Powell picked up five wickets for the match.
But Jerome Taylor, Fidel Edwards and Lionel Baker were all erratic at times.
Ibadulla rejected suggestions the low and slow nature of the pitch had not helped the quicks and, while he conceded the cold weather made swinging the ball difficult, he was in no mood to offer either bowling attack any concessions.
"If the conditions are absolutely right for swing, then even a schoolboy can swing the ball. They are playing test cricket. If the ball is not swinging easily, then it is their job to make the ball swing."
Good bowlers took wickets on all kinds of wickets and in all conditions, he added.
"It would be wrong to say the pitch was benign. Imagine Richard Hadlee bowling on it. Can you see the point I'm making? People like Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev and Terry Alderman bowled on all sorts of pitches and in all conditions and still took wickets."