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Snowden Makes Huge Contribution

First-Year Forward Third in League in Rebounding, Field Goal Percentage

Which makes this season's turn of events all the more surprising. A freshman, for essentially the first time in his life, being the crunch-time player? Who would believe it?

The basketball team obviously doesn't mind it. Almost halfway through the Ivy League schedule, Harvard Coach Frank Sullivan has expressed no reservations about Snowden.

"Midway through the season, [Snowden] has shown that he is one of the best freshmen in the league," Sullivan said.

And by no means has Snowden let his fame get him nervous. Just as strongly as he holds his ego in check, Snowden does not act awed on the court as he does off it. He plays like there is no reason to worry, as if he was just having fun.

He showed this attitude best during the fall practices, treating his first taste of college ball like it was nothing big.

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"I had no idea what to expect [this year during tryouts]," Snowden said. "I treated it like it wasn't a big step, and the coaches were happy with me."

This happy-go-lucky attitude comes out in Snowden when he talks about the team in general. Princeton and Pennsylvania do not seem like titans to him, no matter how many times in a row that they have beaten Harvard.

"They are great teams, [but] I know that we're not far away from putting ourselves in the upper echelon," Snowden says.

And so Snowden takes this frame of mind into the rest of the season. This weekend the Crimson travel to Cornell and then Columbia, and the sky is the limit for Snowden.

"We need to win both games," he says. "[We need] to finish at the top of the league, and gain some momentum for the rest of the season."

He is like a painter that attacks the canvas with fun and excitement, and is then embarrassed to learn that he has created a masterpiece.

It is hard to tell how close to the top Harvard will finish this year, but no matter what, Snowden will be back again next year, striving to be the best and making the big play when needed. Because of that alone, the Crimson's future promises to be bright.

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