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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, March 16, 2006

Knowing the good, bad, ugly of this team

By Stephen Tsai
Advertiser Staff Writer

It's not unusual for Hawai'i volleyball player Mark Ribeiro to imitate his famous cousin's dance moves.

GREGORY YAMAMOTO | The Honolulu Advertiser

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MEN’S VOLLEYBALL

WHO: Loyola-Chicago vs. Hawai‘i

WHERE: Stan Sheriff Center

WHEN: Tomorrow and Saturday, 7 p.m.

TV: Live on K5

ADMISSION: Free tomorrow to UH students and youth wearing green. $14 lower level; $11 upper level adults; $9 upper level 62-older; $3 upper level UH students and ages 4-18, Super Rooter. Parking is $3.

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You know a lot about the University of Hawai'i men's volleyball team.

You know radio play-by-play announcer Scott Robbs' pet phrase for a kill, "Crush the coconut," is a shout-out to his wife, Dori, who uses the online nickname, "Coconut Girl."

You probably know opposite attacker Lauri Hakala has videotaped every episode of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" television show.

But did you know . . .

  • . . . Backup outside hitter Mark Ribeiro's cousin is actor Alfonso Ribeiro, who played the Carlton Banks character on "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" television show?

    "It's my favorite show," Mark said, noting reruns air daily on several cable stations.

    "Carlton" was known for doing his arm-swimming dance to Tom Jones' "It's Not Unusual" — moves Mark has mastered, and performs for friends and teammates.

  • . . . Middle blocker Mauli'a LaBarre's pre-match ritual is to eat seven bananas in 60 seconds?

    "And it has to be Chiquita bananas, the long ones, not Dole," LaBarre said.

    Last year, LaBarre and teammates Jake Schkud and Brian Beckwith discussed feats of feasts. Downing a gallon of milk? Metabolically impossible. Scarfing 40 hard-boiled eggs in a few minutes? Nasty.

    "Then we came up with the seven bananas in a minute," LaBarre said. "We started it this year. If I can't do that before every (match), we're not going to win."

    Since LaBarre broke into the starting lineup last month, the Warriors have won 10 of 11.

    Schkud, who serves as proctor, supplies the bananas. "I have to keep doing it until I get seven," LaBarre said. "If I do six, I have to start all over. Jake makes sure I do it."

    Although bananas are known to, well, alter digestion, LaBarre has experienced no side effects during matches.

    "Afterwards," he said, "as soon as the game stops, I'm like, 'Whoa, dude.' . . . It's like the time I was a freshman and I drank a bottle of boysenberry syrup and I ate a stick of butter at Ken's Pancake House."

  • . . . Team captain Alfee Reft was the organ player for his church choir?

    "I started when I was in the seventh grade," said Reft, a member of the Church of Christ in Oxnard, Calif.

    The experience helped him feel comfortable performing in front of sizeable crowds.

    "I'd say there were about 400 a week," he said. "That was our average congregation."

  • . . . Backup setter Sean Carney waxed his chest last month?

    "He looks like the '40-year-old Virgin,' " Beckwith said.

    Carney said the waxing occurred during a team party. "That was kind of a bad choice," he said.

    Schkud said hot wax was poured onto Carney's chest, and "we just ripped it off. It was painful for him, I think. He bled a little bit. But he was a trooper."

    Carney said: "It hurt a lot. It was an aggressive waxing. It won't happen again until I can regrow some skin cells."

  • . . . Beckwith placed the volleyball near his face so opponents couldn't see the deep breath he took before serving?

    Although angles from television shots showed otherwise, "I wasn't kissing the volleyball," Beckwith said. "I don't kiss volleyballs. It was my ritual, like a basketball player doing something before shooting a free throw."

  • . . . Schkud visited Neverland Ranch, where he met the owner, Michael Jackson?

    It was two years ago, when Schkud was a freshman at UC Santa Barbara. "A good family friend knew them and took us there," Schkud said. "It was fun."

    Schkud described the Santa Barbara property as "a big amusement park, with a lot of rides."

    He said there was a section for animals. "I checked out one of the monkeys," he said. "It wasn't 'Bubbles.'"

    Schkud said the visitors were allowed to tour part of the mansion. One room "had a bunch of plaques of (Jackson's) greatest hits," Schkud said. "That was cool to see. You always see something like that on ("MTV) Cribs" or whatever."

    He also said he and his group met the King of Pop.

    "He had a mask on," Schkud said. "It was a little freaky at first, but I got over it. I shook his hand. He seemed normal. He was a nice guy. He signed autographs. I brought a basketball, and he signed it. I have it at home."

  • . . . Opposite attacker Johnny Matt Bender can moonwalk?

    "I learned in high school," he said. "I had p.e. class with a guy who taught me how to do it. It's actually pretty simple, but you need a good surface. Ever since then, it's one of my talents. It's a good ice-breaker at parties."

  • . . . UH's 2002 NCAA championship banner is folded and tucked in a cabinet in arena manager Rich Sheriff's office?

    After the Warriors were stripped of the title in 2004, "Herman (Frazier, UH's athletic director) told me to take it, and I'm hanging on to it until he tells me what to do with it," Sheriff said.

    He said he does not have any desire to offer it on eBay. "I wouldn't do that," he said.

    This year's NCAA final four will be played at Penn State, site of the 2002 championships. "Hopefully, we'll be able to take (the banner) out, change the last digit, and put it up," Sheriff said.

    Reach Stephen Tsai at stsai@honoluluadvertiser.com.