He played in the 43rd annual Big 33 Football Classic, featuring the top players from Pennsylvania and Ohio.
He was a second-team All-America selection and an All-Big East Conference first-team choice by The NFL Draft Report in his final season at Boston College.
In 2003, he started every game, including the San Francisco Bowl, at right guard, providing excellent blocking as tailback Derrick Knight ranked fourth in the nation in rushing with 1,721 yards.
Snee was third-team Freshman All-America selection by Sporting News in 2001 and was a member of the Big East's All-Freshman team.
He made his NFL debut against the Philadelphia Eagles, where he helped Tiki Barber rush for 125 yards on nine carries, including a 72-yard score.
He arrived at the stadium early, but there was no progress in his condition prior to the time the Giants had to submit their list of inactive players.
Snee and the line provided enough run blocking for Barber again for him to rush for a then team record 220 yards vs. the Kansas City Chiefs.
In the NFC Wild Card game against the Philadelphia Eagles, the line allowed one sack and provided enough blocking for the Giants to rush for 151 yards on 31 carries.
Snee provided enough run blocking for the Giants offense to rush for 2,156 yards, the seventh-highest total in the NFL.
In week 17 Snee helped Tiki Barber rush for a franchise record 234 yards in a playoff-clinching win against the Washington Redskins.
The line's blocking enabled the Giants to finish fourth in the NFL in rushing yardage with an average of 134.3 yards a game.
Snee also enabled the Giants to rush for 289 yards in a playoff-clinching victory against the Buffalo Bills, their highest total in 22 years.
He started in the game as the Giants defeated the New England Patriots by a score of 21–17 giving him his second Super Bowl title.