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Cheema Z: Drop Scene-A Short Play (Sept, 1993 - Humour?)
Drop Scene - A Short Play by Zahid Zia Cheema (Pakistani Crick-
eter, Sept 1993)
Characters: Graham Gooch, David Gower, Mike Gatting, Ian Bot-
ham, and Mike Atherton.
Scene: The English dressing room gripped by pain amidst pin-
drop silence; not even a rat having the audacity to stir. Four
easy chairs occupied by four English stalwarts, searching for
something in a vacuum, wearing a worried, even a petrified look.
Botham (breaking the ice while saying grudgingly to Gooch): I
reckon, it is time for you to vacate the centrestage.
Gooch (least bothered): Better take care of your own business.
I believe you should have hung up your spikes a decade ago.
Botham (with a bemused look on his face): Why? Don't I have an
enviable Test record? Probably I am the greatest all-rounder to
don the Test cap.
Gooch: Yeah, scoring hundreds at home and too against maligned
outfits. If that amounts to greatness, David Gower ought to be
treated likewise.
Gower (intervenes rather indignantly): Why do you guys pick on
me? I have scored runs elsewhere too. Don't try to make me a
scapegoat for all your recent fiascos. And by the way (pointing
at Gooch), you have laid me off since 1990 after that indecent
tigermoth affair in Australia.
Gooch (sarcastically): Well, you golden boy, you can't nudge
me out of recognition anymore. I have also joined your elite
company by knocking off 8000-plus Test runs, more hundreds than
what you have barely managed and an equally impressive Test aver-
age.
Gower: Yes, I know how and when did that sumptuous runmaking
feast take place; at Lord's, I guess where you stockpiled that
mountain of runs-456 (333 and 123) to be precise, against (unable
to control his fit of laughter) Kumble and his companions in
1990.
Gooch (retaliating): If I am not wrong you scored 730 odd runs
against Australia in 1985 against a paranoid Australian leggie
Holland and an over-worked Australian warhorse Thompson.
Gatting (jumps into the discussion with obvious intentions of
pacifying the two): Leave the past in peace and better seek to
peep into the future, wise old guys.
Botham (addressing Gatting): You stay clear of this discus-
sion. You have handed us over nothing but insomnia, 'enfant ter-
rible!' (saying to himself inaudibly)...more loyal to Middlesex
and hanging fiddle at home when abroad. A shameless British
bulldog.
Gatting (candidly): But did not I help you record that unpre-
cedented Ashes win over Australia in 1986-87 and two coveted
limited-over trophies Down Under in a matter of weeks. How ac-
comodating is your memory. Are not you going senile, Ian?
Botham (in a fit of rage): And how mean are you imbecile! You
owe gratitude to Broad, Gower, Small, and who else, but me for
the success in Australia. No wonder you are very fond of shining
with reflected lights.
Someone knocks hysterically at the door as if to gatecrash if
denied the permission to step in.
Botham (fussingly): Who the Dickens is banging the door?
Outsider (in a mellow tone): It is me.
Gooch (fuming): How on earth are we to recognize your Mr.
Anonymous. Don't you have a tongue in your mouth? Spell out
your name, bloke.
Outsider (with a voice that has undercurrents of shivering):
Atherton.
Gower: Step in kid.
Atherton walks in like a timid lamb with a face of revealing
mixed feelings of hushed fear and excitement.
Gatting: What are you looking for, Ted Dexter's spy?
Atherton (addressing Gooch): I have a special message from Mr.
Ted Dexter
Gooch (rather perplexed): What is that?
Atherton (shrugging his shoulders): I am afraid, can't make it
public.
Botham, Gatting and even a man of finished manners David Gower
all yell at Atheron simultaneously: Today the toddler is keeping
things away from us. Well said, diminutive creature.
Gooch (to Atherton): Kid, talk sense.
Atherton: It will be a sort of shock to you.
Gooch (composed): I am prepared.
Atherton: Shall I speak?
Gatting: Don't waste a second.
Atherton: Ted wants you to resign, immediately.
Gooch (blushing): But why?
Botham (winks at his colleagues and chuckles): The old man has
sent his brain on a cruise. Gower let him know what is the alle-
gation against him and how very correct it is.
Gower (to Botham): By the way, you are also on the wrong side
of 30 and a few months younger than the old man.
Gatting (putting a finger on his lips): Hark! Listen to what
the infant in arms has to say.
Atherton (hesitatingly): And he wants me to take care of the
side.
All the four stalwarts go into a comatose situation.
Atherton (regaining his breath): And he wants Ian Botham to
announce his retirement from Test cricket.
Gower (with bated breath): Is that all?
Atherton: No, I am afraid. He wants you (points at Gower and
Gatting) two to quit county cricket.
The four woe-struck former English skippers jump out of their
seats with threatening looks and haggard eyes, pouncing in vain
at Atherton, who sneaks out of the dressing room kept ajar, like
a scared mouse as if the tocsin had begun to ring, apprising him
of the presence of a cat in the vicinity.
The four aging maestros throw themselves into the comforting
easy chairs, closing their shutters. But all they could manage
is a feeble recall of their once glorious past and certainly not
the nightmare imposed on their nerves by Ted Dexter's new choice.
Contributed by Shash(sshah@*.acns.nwu.edu)
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