Garth Snow Explained

Garth Snow
Birth Date:28 July 1969
Birth Place:Wrentham, Massachusetts, U.S.
Height Ft:6
Height In:3
Weight Lb:200
Position:Goaltender
Catches:Left
Played For:Quebec Nordiques
Philadelphia Flyers
Vancouver Canucks
Pittsburgh Penguins
New York Islanders
SKA St. Petersburg
Ntl Team:USA
Draft:114th overall
Draft Year:1987
Draft Team:Quebec Nordiques
Career Start:1994
Career End:2006

Garth E. Snow (born July 28, 1969) is an American former professional ice hockey goaltender and former general manager, president and alternate governor[1] of the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League (NHL).

Drafted by the Quebec Nordiques in the sixth round of the 1987 NHL Entry Draft, Snow began his NHL career in the 1993–94 season, playing for the Nordiques, Vancouver Canucks, Pittsburgh Penguins, and New York Islanders, with which he retired with after the 2005–06 season. He was inducted into the Rhode Island Hockey Hall of Fame in 2019.

Playing career

Snow was drafted by the Quebec Nordiques out of Mount Saint Charles Academy in the sixth round of the 1987 NHL Entry Draft. He went straight to the University of Maine for four years and for three straight years led the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in wins. After helping lead the school to a 42–1–2 record and the NCAA Championship in 1993, he was named to the All-Tournament team. After spending the majority of 1993–94 playing for the United States national team, which included playing in the 1994 Winter Olympics, he turned to his professional career, seeing his first NHL action in five games for the Nordiques.

Snow recorded 32 wins in 62 games for the Cornwall Aces of the American Hockey League (AHL) during 1994–95. After the Quebec franchise relocated to Colorado, Snow was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for two draft picks during the off-season. Snow backed up veteran Ron Hextall for over two seasons, alternating with Hextall during the Flyers' run to the Stanley Cup Finals in 1997, most notably playing in Game 2 of the Finals. Near the trade deadline in 1997–98, he was traded to the Vancouver Canucks for Sean Burke.

As a Canuck in 1998–99, he registered career highs in games played (65), wins (20) and shutouts (6). His workload was cut in half the following season and he signed with the Pittsburgh Penguins prior to 2000–01. His stay in Pittsburgh lasted one season as he signed with the New York Islanders in the off-season, playing for them for the rest of his career, primarily as a backup to veteran Chris Osgood and then youngster Rick DiPietro.

Throughout his career, Snow was the target of the league office on several occasions over his goaltending equipment, in particular his shoulder pads, which opposing teams accused of violating NHL rules on size.[2] According to former teammate Michael Peca, Snow was one of the best trash-talkers around: "He's got such a wit and sense of humor like no other. Snow says things that will cut you without being rude or obnoxious."[3] Snow was regarded as a respected leader both on and off the ice.

Executive career

On July 18, 2006, Snow officially confirmed his retirement and was named general manager of the New York Islanders following Neil Smith's dismissal after 41 days on the job.[4] There was much criticism directed the Islanders' way for firing a Stanley Cup-winning general manager after such a short tenure in favor of Snow, who at the time of his hiring held no experience in management. Defenders of the organization pointed to Snow's master's degree in Administration and bachelor's degree in Business Administration from the University of Maine.[5]

In Snow's first season as general manager, he earned praise for making moves to open up space under the salary cap and using the space to trade for Marc-André Bergeron, Richard Zedník and Ryan Smyth. Snow was named NHL Executive of the Year for 2006–07 by Sports Illustrated.[6] [7] Early in his tenure Snow signed goaltender Rick DiPietro to a 15 year, $67.5M contract[8] which is widely considered to be one of the worst NHL signings ever[9] as DiPietro only played 175 games after this contract was signed. On November 15, 2010, Snow fired head coach Scott Gordon and promoted Jack Capuano to interim head coach after the Islanders suffered a poor record of 4–10–3 in their first 17 games of the 2010–11 season. Capuano went on to guide the Islanders to their first playoff series win since 1993 during the 2016 playoffs. On January 17, 2017, Snow fired Capuano and promoted Doug Weight to interim head coach in response to the Islanders' record of 17–17–8 through 42 games of the 2016–17 season, which was ranked last in the Eastern Conference at that time. Through the 2017–18 season, his tenure with the Islanders saw the team accrue 11 playoff wins.

On June 5, 2018, Snow's position as Islanders' general manager was terminated, although he remained with the organization through 2019.[10] [11]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGP W L T OTL MIN GA SV%GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
1986–87Mount St. Charles AcademyHSRI30 1,795 53 10 1.77
1987–88Stratford CullitonsMWJHL30 20 6 0 1,642 93 2 3.40
1988–89University of MaineHE5 2 2 0 241 14 1 3.49
1990–91University of MaineHE25 18 4 0 1,290 64 2 2.98 .879
1991–92University of MaineHE31 25 4 0 1,792 73 2 2.44 .883
1992–93University of MaineHE23 21 0 1 1,210 42 1 2.08
1993–94United StatesIntl23 13 5 3 1,324 71 1 3.22
1993–94Cornwall AcesAHL16 6 5 3 927 51 0 3.30 .89113 8 5 790 42 0 3.19
1993–94Quebec NordiquesNHL5 3 2 0 279 16 0 3.44 .874
1994–95Cornwall AcesAHL62 32 20 7 3,558 162 3 2.73 .9008 4 3 402 14 2 2.09
1994–95Quebec NordiquesNHL2 1 1 0 119 11 0 5.55 .8251 0 0 9 1 0 6.78 .667
1995–96Philadelphia FlyersNHL26 12 8 4 1,437 69 0 2.88 .8941 0 0 1 0 0 0.00
1996–97Philadelphia FlyersNHL35 14 8 8 1,884 79 2 2.52 .90312 8 4 699 33 0 2.83 .892
1997–98Philadelphia FlyersNHL29 14 9 4 1,651 67 1 2.43 .902
1997–98Vancouver CanucksNHL12 3 6 0 504 26 0 3.10 .901
1998–99Vancouver CanucksNHL65 20 31 8 3,501 171 6 2.93 .900
1999–00Vancouver CanucksNHL32 10 15 3 1,712 76 0 2.66 .902
2000–01Wilkes–Barre/Scranton PenguinsAHL3 2 1 0 178 7 0 2.36 .920
2000–01Pittsburgh PenguinsNHL35 14 15 4 2,032 101 3 2.98 .900
2001–02New York IslandersNHL25 10 7 2 1,217 55 2 2.71 .9001 0 0 26 2 0 4.71 .895
2002–03New York IslandersNHL43 16 17 5 2,390 92 1 2.31 .9185 1 4 305 12 0 2.36 .910
2003–04New York IslandersNHL39 14 15 5 2,015 94 1 2.80 .899
2004–05SKA St. PetersburgRSL16 893 41 1 2.75
2005–06New York IslandersNHL20 4 13 1 1,096 68 0 3.72 .886
2005–06Bridgeport Sound TigersAHL1 1 0 0 60 1 0 1.00 .967
NHL totals368 135 147 43 1 19,837 925 16 2.80 .90020 9 8 1039 48 1 2.77 .896

International

YearTeamEventGPWLTMINGASOGAASV%
1994United StatesOG51312991703.41.881
1998United StatesWC51212601202.77.865
Senior totals102525592903.11

Awards and honors

AwardYear
All-Hockey East Second Team1991–92
All-Hockey East Second Team1992–93
Hockey East All-Tournament Team1993[12]
All-NCAA All-Tournament Team1993[13]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Business Directory - New York Islanders - Staff . Islanders.nhl.com . 2016-02-14.
  2. News: Flyers ride Snow's 'big' shoulders . John F. . Bonfatti . . Philadelphia . 1997-05-06 . 2020-03-21.
  3. (The Hockey News, August 30, 2002)
  4. Web site: TSN : NHL - Canada's Sports Leader.
  5. Web site: Garth Snow, General Manager. 2016-02-29. New York Islanders.
  6. Web site: Snow Hailed. 2016-02-29 . New York Islanders.
  7. Web site: The NHL: Snow Storm. 2016-02-29. March 12, 2007. Sports Illustrated.
  8. Web site: RICK DiPIETRO #39 . capfriendly.com . 2023-12-26.
  9. Web site: Top 10 biggest busts in NHL draft history . sportsnet.ca . 2023-12-23.
  10. Web site: Islanders relieve GM Garth Snow, head coach Doug Weight of duties. 2016-06-05. Newsday.com.
  11. Compare https://web.archive.org/web/20190417034546/https://www.nhl.com/islanders/team/business-directory with https://web.archive.org/web/20191215065249/https://www.nhl.com/islanders/team/business-directory.
  12. News: 2013-14 Hockey East Media Guide. Hockey East. 2014-05-19.
  13. News: NCAA Frozen Four Records. NCAA.org. 2013-06-19.