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Eric Snow

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Position
  
Assistant coach

Listed weight
  
190 lb (86 kg)

Siblings
  
Percy Snow

Listed height
  
6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)

Height
  
1.91 m

Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Basketball player

League
  
Conference USA

Name
  
Eric Snow


Eric Snow Eric Snow Quotes QuotesGram


Born
  
April 24, 1973 (age 51) Canton, Ohio (
1973-04-24
)

College
  
Michigan State (1991–1995)

Spouse
  
DeShawn Snow (m. 1998–2011), Carrie Snow

Children
  
Jarren Christopher Snow, Eric Javon Snow, Darius Michael Snow

Similar People
  
Percy Snow, Brett Brown, David Blatt, Bob Whitfield

Eric snow where i m from mix by misiek


Eric Snow (born April 24, 1973) is an American retired professional basketball player and businessman. He was an assistant at Florida Atlantic for two years (2014-2016). He went to FAU after two seasons at SMU (2012-14) where he worked under Hall of Fame Coach Larry Brown as the Director of Player Development.

Contents

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Nba tv dwyane wade s crossover on eric snow


High school career

Eric Snow Cavaliers Announce Medically Necessary Release of Guard Eric Snow

Snow began his basketball career at Canton McKinley High School in Canton, Ohio. He was McKinley High School's MVP for three straight seasons.

College career

Eric Snow 2 Detroit Pistons 1 vs 4 Cleveland Cavaliers 2 Archive

Snow attended college at Michigan State University. He played varsity basketball at Michigan State under head coach Jud Heathcote. In his senior season, the Spartans earned a #3 seed to the 1995 NCAA Tournament, but they were upset in the first round by Weber State University.

Seattle Supersonics

Eric Snow After long NBA run Eric Snow turns focus to coaching

After college, Snow was chosen by the Milwaukee Bucks in the second round of the 1995 NBA draft. He was immediately traded to the Seattle SuperSonics, where he played sparingly for the next two-and-one-half seasons.

Philadelphia 76ers

On January 18, 1998, Snow was acquired from Seattle by the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for a second-round draft pick. At the time of the trade, Snow was averaging just 4.4 minutes per game; Sixers head coach Larry Brown gave him a bigger role in Philadelphia. In his first full season in Philadelphia, he started every game he played in and averaged 35.8 minutes per game.

As a pass-first, defensive-minded point guard, Snow became a stalwart of the Brown-era 76ers teams, due largely to his ability to guard the opposing team's shooting guards, which made him an ideal complement to his diminutive but high-scoring backcourt mate Allen Iverson. Despite missing thirty-two games early in the 2000–01 season due to injury, Snow played a crucial role in helping the 76ers earn the top playoff seed in the Eastern Conference and ultimately reach the 2001 NBA Finals, where they lost in five games to the Los Angeles Lakers. During the following season, Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant stated that nobody in the league defended him better than Snow.

In 2002–03, Snow posted career highs in points per game (12.9), rebounds per game (3.7), minutes per game (37.9), field goal percentage (45.2%), and free throw percentage (85.8%). Snow's excellent free throw percentage was particularly noteworthy, as he had been a very poor foul shooter in college and early in his NBA career, averaging 52.1% from the stripe during his four seasons at Michigan State and 59.2% as a rookie. He also averaged 6.6 assists and 1.6 steals per game in 2002–03.

Cleveland Cavaliers

On July 20, 2004, Snow was traded to the Cavaliers in exchange for Kevin Ollie and Kedrick Brown. He was suspended without pay for a December 18, 2004 game against the Boston Celtics after a confrontation with Paul Silas, the coach of the Cavaliers. It was the only game that Snow missed in his first three years with the Cavaliers. He had a season-high 16 points on January 22, 2005 against the Golden State Warriors and a season-high 13 assists on April 19, 2005 against the Boston Celtics (which is also his high assist total as a Cavalier). Snow ranked fifth in the NBA in assist-to-turnover ratio (3.56); he donated $20 for every one of his steals and assists during the 2004–05 season.

Snow played in and started all 82 games for the Cavaliers in the 2005-06 season, helping the Cavaliers return to the playoffs for the first time since 1998. He started all 13 playoff games for the Cavaliers. He scored 18 points in a Game 5 victory over the Washington Wizards during the first round of the playoffs.

The following season, for the fifth and final time in his career, Snow played in all 82 games. He had a season high 18 points on January 13, 2007 against the Los Angeles Clippers and a season-high 11 assists on January 20, 2007 against the Golden State Warriors. However, he gradually lost playing time through the course of the season to Daniel Gibson, until he came off the bench on January 30, 2007, bringing an end to Snow's streak of starts that lasted for 127 games. The Cavaliers made the NBA Finals and lost to the San Antonio Spurs in a sweep that year.

In his 13th NBA season, Snow was named team co-captain, along with LeBron James. Snow only played in 22 games that season. On March 11, 2008, it was announced that Snow would miss four to six weeks due to arthritic-related symptoms in his left knee, ending his season. After the injury, Snow conceded that he likely would not play in the NBA again.

Unable to play, but still listed as an active player on the Cavaliers' roster, Snow served on Head Coach Mike Brown's staff as an unofficial assistant coach, for the 2008-09 season. On April 4, 2009, Snow was given a "medically necessary" release, and began working as an analyst for NBA TV.

Through his career, Snow reached the NBA Finals three times—once with each of the teams on which he has played: the SuperSonics in 1996, the 76ers in 2001, and the Cavaliers in 2007-all three appearances were loses. In Philadelphia and Cleveland, Snow had served as team co-captain along Allen Iverson and Lebron James respectively.

Personal life

Snow is the younger brother of former linebacker Percy Snow, who also played at Michigan State University, and for both the Kansas City Chiefs and the Chicago Bears of the NFL.

References

Eric Snow Wikipedia


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