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DOUBLE TROUBLE: Kelty and Hannah
Luber, here celebrating their last day of weight
training, scored a total of 153 goals for the Cardinal.
Rod Searcey |
At 6-foot-2 in their bare feet, with a standing
reach of eight feet, you’d expect twins Hannah and
Kelty Luber to command a presence on almost any varsity team.
They began swimming in elementary school. “But the competition
was just too stressful,” says Kelty. “And our parents
thought swim meets were boring,” Hannah adds.
Next, they tried basketball. “But we weren’t that
good at dribbling, and we didn’t understand setting picks,” says
Hannah. “And one day I spazzed out and fell backwards
and broke both my arms.” Understandable, Kelty adds: “We’re
not gymnasts. We don’t know how to tuck and roll.”
Finally, in eighth grade, their parents signed the twins
up for water polo. Kelty: “We’d never even heard
of it.” Hannah: “And we hated it.”
With water polo a relatively new girls’ sport, the Beaverton,
Ore., natives often found themselves playing against high school
boys. Which wasn’t so awful, as it turned out. “We
got crushes on the older boys,” says Hannah. “And
the head coach was really nice.”
Today, the senior sisters are somewhat surprised to find
themselves co-captains of the Cardinal women’s squad. “I
mean, we’re good at water polo, but we’re not really
jocks,” Hannah says. “We love the sport to a certain
extent, but we really came to play here because of the program
and the coaching.”
And what a ride it’s been. The sisters have competed
for the national title three times in four years. In 2002,
Kelty was one of six Cardinal players to score in the
final game against UCLA, leading the team to its first NCAA
championship. This year, Hannah scored one of two
goals in the title game, but the Bruins prevailed, 3-2. “They’re
both very good in front of the goal,” says coach John
Tanner. “They find each other easily and each certainly
knows what the other is thinking.”
The second-leading scorer on the team this season with
38 goals, Hannah is the one with cropped, auburn-tinted hair. “Hannah
with an ‘H,’ for ‘hair’” as Tanner, ’83,
identifies her. That’s the most apparent difference
between the two Spanish and Portuguese majors, both of whom
speak Spanish, French, Italian and Swahili. In the water polo
team photo, the Lubers stand in the center of the back row,
with their heads tilted at identical angles—Hannah going
right, Kelty going left.
The sisters play marimba and mbira (Zimbabwean thumb piano),
and their dad, who served in the Ivory Coast in the Peace Corps,
often joins them for a show during Africa Week. “He likes
to tell people he played in the Rose Bowl,” Hannah adds. “They’ll
ask, ‘What position?’ and he’ll go, ‘French
horn.’” In the UCLA marching band, that is.
Tanner turns up in the audience whenever the twins perform. “They
have seen every movie I’ve ever heard of, and they’re
a reservoir of knowledge of American pop culture,” he
says. “They read voraciously and are great conversationalists—in
a couple of languages.”
As they prepare for graduation, the Lubers are at ease
about the future, even as they agree they’ll likely split
up. They might join the Peace Corps, play water polo abroad,
go to law school, interpret in hospitals or just relax. “Being
apart is not going to be a big deal,” says Hannah. “We
tell everyone who asks that the biggest drama is going to be
separating all our shoes and clothes.”
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