On July 18, 2006, Snow officially confirmed his retirement and was named
general manager of the New York Islanders following
Neil Smith's dismissal after 41 days on the job. The decision to fire a Stanley Cup-winning general manager after a short tenure in favor of Snow, who had no prior management experience, drew criticism. Supporters of the organization noted Snow's master's degree in administration and bachelor's degree in business administration from the University of Maine. In his first season as general manager, Snow was credited with making moves to create salary cap space and using it to trade for
Marc-André Bergeron,
Richard Zedník, and
Ryan Smyth. Snow was named NHL Executive of the Year for 2006–07 by
Sports Illustrated. Early in his tenure, Snow signed goaltender
Rick DiPietro to a 15-year, $67.5 million contract which is widely considered one of the worst NHL signings ever, as DiPietro only played 175 games after signing this contract. On November 15, 2010, Snow fired head coach
Scott Gordon and promoted
Jack Capuano to interim head coach after the Islanders started the
2010–11 season with a 4–10–3 record through their first 17 games. Capuano subsequently guided the Islanders to their first playoff series win since the
1993 during the
2016 playoffs. On January 17, 2017, Snow fired Capuano and promoted
Doug Weight to interim head coach in response to the Islanders' 17–17–8 record through 42 games of the
2016–17 season, which placed them last in the Eastern Conference at that time. Through the
2018, his tenure with the Islanders saw the team accrue 11 playoff wins. On June 5, 2018, Snow's position as Islanders' general manager was terminated, although he remained with the organization through 2019. ==Career statistics==