Raina said the plan to attack leg-spinner Anthony Martin, who took a career-best haul of 4-36, backfired badly.
"We decided to take on the leg-spinner (Anthony Martin) but we kept losing wickets," said Raina.
India lost their last nine wickets for 105 runs and swiftly went down with 11 overs to spare.
Martin did most of the damage, claiming the vital scalps of Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina in the middle overs.
"We needed at least two stands of 50 runs each. We had a good start but the rest didn't build on it," Raina explained.
The West Indies' bowlers bowled a fair deal of short-pitched deliveries, but India's bowling coach Eric Simmons wasn't ready to concede that it softened up his batsmen.
"I don't think short-pitched bowling is any issue with this team. It's not as if we lost only because we were softened up (by them)," he said.
"Sometimes when a series is lost there is not much to play for; a team is more relaxed and they tend to do well, which is exactly what the West Indies did."
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