Snyder is a person I consider a delightful curmudgeon.
I was, of course, fairly in awe at my very first football press conference after I started with the campus paper. There was a big debate that year about who the quarterback was going to be, Mark Dunn, a highly touted juco transfer with a big arm, and Ell Roberson, then a sophomore for whom it hadn't yet clicked.
Snyder came in exactly on time, as always, and led off with a long comment about how Dunn had earned the starting job for the first game of the season, and "that's all I'm going to say about quarterback."
Somehow, some way, for literally the only time in my three years covering that team, I got the first question after he was done.
"Can quarterback be a strength of this team?"
He slowly turned to me, lips pursed and glaring like he does. He waited a long second.
"I thought I said I wouldn't comment anymore on quarterbacks."
Then his face relaxed, he smiled, gave a good answer to my question and answered about 15 more quarterback questions from the rest of the media.