Personal
Growing up on the beach in Florida made swimming a natural activity for Snyder. He swam for his high school, and at the U.S. Naval Academy where he captained the swim team in 2005-06. On September 7, 2011, he was blinded after stepping on an improvised explosive device (IED) while serving in the U.S. Navy in Kandahar, Afghanistan. The bomb did not affect his arms or legs, but his eyes had to be removed and replaced with prosthetics. One year to the date after losing his vision, Snyder took gold in the men’s S11 400m freestyle at the London 2012 Paralympic Games. In London, he also won gold in the 100m free and silver in the 50m free. Snyder was chosen as the honorary torchbearer for the opening ceremony of the 2013 Warrior Games. In 2016, he competed at his second Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, winning three more Swimming golds in the 50m, 100m and 400m freestyle events and adding a silver in the 100m backstroke. In 2018, Snyder announced his transition from Swimming to paratriathlon. Shortly after switching sports, he earned his first ITU World Paratriathlon Series medal, a bronze at the May 2019 stop in Yokohama, Japan. He won his first elite international Paratriathlon race in 2021 at the World Triathlon Para Championships in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin. He then went on to win his first Paralympic gold medal as a paratriathlete at the Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020. Snyder is the son of Valarie Snyder, who resides in Chattanooga, Tennessee, with his wife Sara. In 2021, Snyder and his wife announced they were pregnant with their first child, due in March 2022. He is the oldest of four children. He has two younger brothers and a younger sister.
Career Highlights
- 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games gold medalist
- 2021 Americas Triathlon Para Championships Pleasant Prairie gold medalist
- 2019 Yokohama ITU World Paratriathlon Series bronze medalist
- 2019 Banyoles ITU Paratriathlon World Cup bronze medalist
- Two-time Sarasota-Bradenton CAMTRI Paratriathlon American Championships bronze medalist (2018, 2019)
- Seven-time Paralympic medalist in swimming, Paralympic Games London 2012 and Rio 2016 (5 golds, 2 silvers)