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University of New Mexico guard Tony Snell climbs the ladder to snip the net following the Lobos 63-56 win over UNLV Saturday afternoon at the Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Tony Snell wins Mountain West tournament MVP

Junior guard key in New Mexico's title run

sports@dailylobo.com
@ThomasRomeroS

LAS VEGAS, Nev. – When asking Tony Snell a question, be prepared for a short answer.

UNM’s junior guard isn’t the most talkative person, but with what he lacks in words he more than makes up on the hard court. Snell’s quiet demure has earned the nickname “Silent Assassin.”

In the Mountain West Basketball Championship title game against UNLV, Snell netted 21 points on 8 of 11 shooting in the No. 15 Lobos 63-56 victory over the Runnin’ Rebels at the Thomas & Mack Center. Sinking five 3-pointers against San Diego State on Friday and UNLV on Saturday, he became the second player in UNM history to hit five triples in consecutive conference tournament games.

The Lobos barraged the Runnin’ Rebels with a balanced attack as eight players scored at least two points, but UNLV head coach Dave Rice said Snell did the majority of the damage.

“The guy who really got away from us today is an NBA player,” Rice said. “There’s no doubt that Tony Snell is going to play in that league for a long time with the things he’s able to do.”

Snell snagged the tournament MVP and MWC all-tournament team honors after averaging 17.6 points, three boards, three assists and four 3-pointers per game over a three-game stretch. He also shot 51 percent from the floor and 57 percent from beyond the arc.

The last two seasons, Snell heated up when winter turned into spring, and he said March is the time of year when he feels most comfortable.

“I just have more confidence now,” he said. “My teammates always encourage me to keep shooting the ball whenever I miss it. My confidence definitely went up.”

The defensive end is where Snell has improved the most since he began at UNM, head coach Steve Alford said. He flashed his defensive skills against San Diego State’s Jamaal Franklin, limiting last season’s MWC Player of the Year to eight points (3 of 12 shooting) in Friday’s 60-50 semifinal win.

“Everybody sees him shoot, everybody wants him to shoot more and score more, but now they see a guy that is really committed to the defensive end,” Alford said. “The defensive end is the unselfish end. I think seeing his development there has given Tony confidence. Now he’s doing more offensively because I think where he’s built his confidence at the defensive end.”

Alford said he wants Snell to become more verbal, but at the same time he doesn’t want to change who Snell is.

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“All these guys lead in their different ways. Kendall (Williams) is more vocal than Tony,” Alford said. “Tony leads a little bit different, but still has done a very good job for us in leadership.”

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