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Chauncey Billups Biography
Excerpts and info from:
www.hoopsvibe.com,
www.jockbio.com,
Chauncey Billups was born in Denver, Colorado on September
25, 1976 to Ray and Faye Billups. The couple welcomed another boy, Rodney,
and a girl, Maria, in the following years. The Billups family was a closeknit
bunch. Faye doted on her children, and they looked out for one another.
Chauncey and Rodney were particularly tight. Both loved sports
and were excellent athletes. Chauncey, however, possessed an inner drive
that his little brother did not. His top two sports were basketball and
football, and he worked hard every day to improve in both.
People who follow Colorado high school sports will tell you
how special a player Chauncey Billups is. In Colorado he took prep school-boy
game to perhaps its highest level ever. At the high school ranks to see
Chauncey Billups was to see something special on the basketball court. Perhaps
no other prep player in Colorado history was more recognizable than Chauncey
Billups. When Billups would walk into a gym just to watch a game, he would
immediately attract attention. Grade schoolers would clamor to sit as close
to him as they can. No other high school player has become a house hold
name like "Chauncey".
During basketball season you couldn’t look through the sports
page with reading about or seeing a picture of Chauncey. As a freshman he
lead his team to the state semifinals, and averaged 16.2 points per game.
During his sophomore year he was regarded as the player to watch for 1993.
Chauncey didn’t disappoint, he went on to lead his team to win the state
championship, averaging 26.3 points per game. Chauncey was the player to
watch throughout his high school career. His junior year he lead his team
to a repeat championship and averaged an astounding 32.5 points per game.
Chauncey was elected First Team All-State, in all of his four years in high
school. He was also player of the year his sophomore and junior year in
the state of Colorado.
By the time Chauncey entered George Washington High School
in 1991, he was already a celebrity in the Denver area. Within a year, he
would be the state’s most recognized athlete. Chauncey was named Colorado’s
Mr. Basketball after his sophomore season, and also earned the award after
his junior and senior years. The personal accolades were flattering, but
Chauncey was all about winning. In the 1993-94 season, he led the Patriots
to the Class 5A state title, dominating rival Horizon High School with a
scintillating performance in the final. Going into his senior year, Chauncey
was regarded as one of the nation’s top prospects. Kansas coach Roy Williams
called him the most talented high schooler he had ever scouted—high praise
considering that years earlier he had recruited Michael Jordan to North
Carolina. Agents could be found in the stands at most of Chauncey’s games.
So could gang bangers, who respected Chauncey so much that he was the one
player they refrained from heckling. Back to the top
As Chauncey pondered the next move in his basketball career,
he found himself being pulled in several directions. Some advised him to
skip college and head directly to the NBA. Others told him to cut a deal
with one of the powerhouse schools. Despite another stellar campaign as
a senior at GW, the year was tough on him because of the passing of a grandmother
and grandfather. Leaving his family didn’t feel right, so he opted for the
University of Colorado. For Chauncey, the chance to play in front of loved
ones in nearby Boulder was too tempting to pass up.
The one thing the Buffaloes could not offer Chauncey was
a proud basketball tradition. Coming off a sub-.500 season, the team had
not been to the NCAA Tournament since the late 1960s. Coach Joe Harrington
was trying to rebuild the program, and Chauncey became the centerpiece of
that effort. But the 1995-96 season turned ugly for Colorado, both on and
off the court.
The team posted another losing record, going 9-18. This,
however, was the least of Colorado’s problems. Harrington’s leadership came
under fire when several players were declared ineligible and several others
wound up in hot water for various indiscretions. Even Chauncey landed in
trouble, after he and teammate Matt Daniel got caught stealing video rental
coupons from a campus bookstore. Embarrassed, he wrote a letter of apology
to the school’s administrators and the student body. His willingness to
accept responsibility for his actions won him widespread praise and enabled
him to rise above the mess.
Chauncey also won a lot of fans with his performance on the hardwood. The
first-year guard enjoyed an outstanding campaign, averaging 17.9 points,
6.3 rebounds, and 5.5 assists. Chauncey scored more than 30 four times,
and was deadly accurate at the foul line (86.1%). Rarely did he look like
a freshman.
The coach was forced to resign, and in his place the school promoted assistant
Ricardo Patton, who was charged with cleaning up the program. Among his
first moves was showing the door to Mack Tuck, one of the team’s top scorers.
To make up for the loss, Patton added Georgia Tech transfer Martice Moore,
the 1993 ACC Rookie of the Year. Still, the pressure was all on Chauncey.
The sophomore took the court in 1996-97 more confident than ever. Over the
summer, he had been selected to a squad of under-22 players that took on
Dream Team III in a tune-up for the Summer Olympics. The young Americans
gave their elders a scare, taking a 17-point halftime lead. before falling
96-90. In 10 minutes of action against the sport’s top players, he amassed
seven points, two steals and two rebounds, while committing no turnovers.
Chauncey rode this momentum into his second season with the Buffaloes.
Three months into the campaign, Colorado’s record stood at
14-3 and the Buffaloes were ranked 18th in the nation—the first time they
had cracked the Top 20 since 1969. Chauncey was leading the way, doing his
best work in conference play. In January his 28 points paced an 87-78 upset
at Missouri. Four nights later he victimized Texas Tech, ending the Red
Raiders’ 35-game home winning streak with a buzzer beater.
Behind their feisty point guard, the Buffaloes finished the year with a
school-record 22 victories, and recorded a first-round upset of Indiana
in the NCAA Tournament. Though they got smoked in their next game by North
Carolina, Chauncey had engineered a stunning turnaround at Colorado. Named
First Team All-Big 12 and Second Team All-America, he topped the team in
scoring and passing, was also a terror on defense.
That spring, Chauncey faced the toughest choice of his life.
Considered the best point guard available in the NBA Draft, he was a certain
lottery pick. The argument for going pro was the multi-million dollar contract
that awaited. The argument for staying in school was the benefit of an extra
year of high-level basketball experience. But after huddling with family
friend Rick Callahan—and considering the star-crossed fate Donnie Boyce
(a former Buffalo whose NBA aspirations vanished after a knee injury in
college)—Chauncey declared himself eligible for the draft. As expected,
his name was called early. Boston picked him third overall, after Tim Duncan
and Keith Van Horn. Back to the top
Chauncey thought the Celtics were a perfect fit for him,
especially given coach Rick Pitino’s up-tempo style. But though the Celtic
coach professed his love for his rookie, he was still smarting from missing
out on Duncan. Chauncey opened the 1997-98 season on a strong note, scoring
15 points and adding four assists in his NBA debut, a 92-85 victory over
the Chicago Bulls. Three months later, however, Boston shipped him out of
town, trading him to Toronto for spare parts. Chauncey tried to make the
best of a bad situation, and finished his first campaign with decent numbers
(11.2 ppg, 2.4 rpg, 3.9 apg and 1.34 spg)
The silver lining was a trade to the Denver Nuggets prior
to the 1998-99 season. Chauncey welcomed the move to Denver for obvious
reasons. He also looked forward to playing in the same backcourt as Nick
Van Exel, a point guard with a similar style to his. Like the rest of his
NBA brethren, Chauncey had to wait until January for the lockout to end.
When the season finally started, Denver didn’t have enough in the tank to
make the playoffs, though Chauncey improved his numbers to 14 points and
four assists a night.
Eager for a full year in Denver, Chauncey was devastated when he dislocated
his left shoulder in December of 1999. Then, after undergoing surgery that
ended his season, he received more bad news, as the Nuggets traded him to
Orlando. Chauncey never suited up for the Magic, spending his few months
with the team rehabbing his injured shoulder before they let him walk.
A free agent, Chauncey signed with Minnesota. At first, the Timberwolves
weren’t sure how he best fit with the team. The franchise was still reeling
from the death of Malik Sealy the previous spring, and head coach Flip Saunders
felt Chauncey was a good candidate to fill the void. He began the 2000-01
season starting in the backcourt with Terrell Brandon. while rookie Wally
Szczerbiak and rising star Kevin Garnett anchored a highly mobile front
line.
The T-Wolves got into a good groove after the first of the year, winning
12 of 16 in January. Saunders, however, was still fiddling with the lineup,
and ultimately decided his squad was better with Chauncey coming off the
bench. He struggled in the role. After scoring in double-digits for the
campaign’s first two months, his average dipped below 10 a game. But with
Minnesota playing well, he accepted his role. The Timberwolves finished
at 47-35, including a franchise-record 30 victories at the Target Center.
But they were no match for Tim Duncan and the Spurs in the playoffs. In
their best-of-five series, San Antonio won easily in four games.
Despite the early post-season exit, Minnesota GM Kevin McHale liked his
nucleus and did some fine-tuning over the summer, adding veterans Joe Smith
and Gary Trent and rookie Loren Woods. The T-Wolves got off to a flying
start, and were 30-10 after their first 40 games. Garnett was maturing into
one of the league’s true superstars, Brandon was healthy after knee surgery
and Szczerbiak appeared in his first All-Star contest. As Chauncey went,
however, so did Minnesota. When he shot well and was active on defense,
the Timberwolves were a hard team to handle. When he struggled and Saunders
took him off the court, they were vulnerable.
Minnesota ended the year at 50-32, but there were plenty of questions heading
into the playoffs. Could Garnett raise his game? Did the team have enough
depth? Could Chauncey be more consistent? The T-Wolves weren’t able to answer
any of them. They were swept by the Dallas Mavericks in the first round,
and McHale began slashing at his roster. Among the cuts was Chauncey, who
once again had to find a new basketball home. Back
to the top
Chauncey did not have a particularly long line of suitors
waiting for him, but he did have an ardent one in the Pistons. The team
was coming off a strong regular season, but a loss to the Celtics in the
playoffs had dampened spirits in Detroit. GM Joe Dumars was certain that
Chauncey was exactly what the club needed: an unorthodox point guard who
was an excellent scorer and who also had an appetite for stingy defense.
With Chauncey, coach Rick Carlisle’s Pistons were a much more dangerous
team. Richard Hamilton found himself open more often on the perimeter, while
Ben Wallace, always a terror on the boards, became a bigger part of the
offensive flow. Six times during the 2002-03 season Chauncey sank a game-winning
shot, and he led the league in baskets in the final two minutes that either
tied the game or put his team ahead.
Chauncey seemed to get stronger as the year wore on. In February he was
named NBA Player of the Week after averaging more than 22 points a game,
and shooting better than 44% from behind the 3-point arc. For the month
of March, he ranked as the league’s 11th best scorer. Chauncey finished
his first campaign in Detroit at 16.2 ppg and 3.7 rpg, both career highs.
At 50-32, the Pistons drew the Magic in the post-season’s first round, and
they were pushed to the brink. Orlando surprised most fans by racing to
a commanding lead in the series. But Chauncey led a furious comeback as
Detroit became just the seventh team in NBA history to rally from a 3-1
deficit. He was at his best in Game 6 in Orlando, pouring in 40 in a 103-88
win.
The Pistons also took their next series, beating the 76ers in six. But the
victory came with a price. Chauncey sprained his left ankle in Game 1, and
sat out three contests in all. Without him at full health for the Eastern
Conference Finals against New Jersey, Detroit stood little chance. The surging
Nets registered an eye-opening four-game sweep.
Detroit’s performance against New Jersey certainly got Dumars’s attention.
He reacted by canning Carlisle, and luring Larry Brown from Philly. The
veteran coach favored a more open style of offense that emphasized team
play. Brown asked his troops to share the ball and move without it. Brown
also talked a lot with Chauncey, making him realize that he didn’t have
to hoist up shot after shot to be effective.
The Pistons didn’t immediately adjust to Brown’s system. In fact, it wasn’t
until Dumars took a gamble and pulled the trigger on a deadline deal for
the tempestuous Rasheed Wallace that the team really came together. He immediately
moved into the starting lineup, giving Brown another solid scoring option
on offense and a ferocious rebounder and shot-blocker on defense. In March,
the Pistons won eight in a row by at least 15 points, a streak never before
accomplished in the NBA. Back to the top
Game after game, Chauncey contributed whatever the team happened to need
at any given moment. His heady play proved vital to the club’s success,
and he became Detroit’s unquestioned floor leader. In a February game against
Minnesota, Chauncey burned his former team with his second career triple-double,
scoring 20 points with 10 rebounds and 11 assists. He ended the year at
16.9 points, but more important, he increased his assists numbers to nearly
six a night.
Despite their 51-win season, the Pistons were considered a playoff dark
horse. The Nets had been to the finals twice in two years, and were expected
to make it again. Most figured the NBA champion would come out of the West
anyway, with either the Lakers or Spurs seizing the crown. Detroit made
a statement in the first round, defeating the Milwaukee Bucks in five games.
Next they choked off the New Jersey offense in a hard-fought seven-game
semifinal. In another epic defense struggle, Chauncey & Co. beat the Pacers
in six games, allowing just 65 points in each of their last two victories.
In the franchise’s first appearance in the NBA Finals since 1990, Detroit
faced off against LA. No one gave the Pistons even an outside shot of beating
Kobe, Shaq and company. When the club won Game 1, the experts called it
a fluke. But Detroit’s game plan had worked to perfection. Brown figured
Bryant and O’Neal were going to get their points, so he had his team smother
the rest of the rest of the Lakers. Chauncey pressured guards Gary Payton
and Derek Fisher, while the tandem of Wallace and Wallace hit the boards
with a vengeance. Though LA won Game 2 in overtime, they needed a miracle
jumper from Kobe to do it.
The Pistons headed back to the Palace of Auburn Hills believing the series
was theirs for the taking. They were right. Detroit swept the next three—88-68,
88-80 and 100-87—to capture the franchise’s first NBA title since the glory
days of Dumars. Chauncey, who averaged 21 points, 3.2 rebounds, 5.2 assists
and 1.2 steals, was named the series MVP. But the Pistons were celebrated
more for their overall team effort. Basketball fans lauded them for playing
the game the way it was meant to be played.
Detroit opened the 2004-05 intent on a repeat performance. They had a new
obstacle in the East, as Shaq was now wearing a Miami uniform. The Pistons
roared through the regular season with 54 wins, with Chauncey expanding
his leadership role and raising his stats to 16.5 points, 5.8 assists and
3.4 rebounds per game. Beyond the stats, he was doing a lot of the little
things that enabled Detroit to win in Brown’s system. His Pistons generated
their biggest headlines for an ugly brawl that erupted during a November
game against the rival Pacers. The incident derailed Indiana, as Ron Artest,
Stephen Jackson and Jermaine O'Neal all were disciplined with heavy suspensions.
Detroit, a decidedly more veteran club, handled the situation with much
cooler heads. Back to the top
The Pistons entered the playoffs as the two-seed, expecting a showdown with
the Heat in the conference finals. Detroit opened the post-season against
Brown’s former team, the 76ers. The Pistons won the first two at home before
dropping an overtime battle in Philly. Chauncey then seized control of the
series, leading the team with 48 points in Games 4 and 5 to close out the
76ers.
Before Detroit squared off against Miami, the team had to outslug Indiana
in the conference semis. The hype surrounding the series heightened for
obvious reasons. But the Pistons hardly resorted to thuggery. After falling
behind two games to one, they rallied for three victories in a row, including
a pair on the road. Chauncey was at his best in Game 4, scoring 29 points
and dishing out six assists. With their leader showing the way, the Pistons
clamped down on the Pacers, and cruised into the Eastern Conference Finals.
Miami was favored by many heading into the series, despite a less-than-healthy
Shaquille O'Neal. Dwyane Wade, however, was playing like a superstar, and
the Heat bench was providing valuable minutes. Once again, Detroit found
itself down two games to one, as Miami out-shot, out-rebounded and out-hustled
them. Chauncey helped even the series with a 17-point, seven-assist effort
in Game 4, but the Heat stunned the defending champs with an 88-76 victory
two nights later. With their backs against the wall, the Pistons responded
with a 25-point trouncing in Game 6, and then closed out Miami on the road
in Game 7. Chauncey came up big in the finale, posting 18 points, eight
assists and four boards.
The NBA Finals was a classic that went the distance. After dropping the
first two games against the Spurs in San Antonio, the Pistons returned home
to take the next two. Defense was the calling card for the winner in each
contest. Detroit couldn't break 76 points on San Antonio's home floor, and
the Spurs were equally ineffective in their losses. Game 5 looked to be
the crucial contest of the series, and Chauncey tried to do his part, pouring
in 34 points. But too often he thought shot first, and the Detroit offense
failed to get important buckets when they were needed most. Behind 26 points
and 19 rebounds from Tim Duncan, the Spurs won 96-95 in OT, and seized a
commanding edge.
No team in NBA history had ever taken the last two games of a Finals series
away from home, meaning the Pistons faced daunting odds entering Game 6.
But with Brown imploring team basketball, Detroit controlled the action,
and claimed a nine-point victory with relative ease. That set up the decisive
Game 7, which was a seesaw affair into the fourth quarter. The Pistons,
however, eventually ran out of gas, as San Antonio captured its third title
in seven years by a score of 81-74. Chauncey was surprisingly quiet with
just 13 points.
Regardless of his sub-par showing in Game 7, Chauncey has clearly established
himself as a true money player. He has the offensive skills to pour in 25
a night, the floor generalship to dish out double-digit assists, and the
commitment on D to shut down the league’s best guards. Once the NBA’s best-kept
secret, he has not only gained recognition for his wide range of skills,
but has been hailed for the manner in which he blends them. Chauncey appreciates
the respect as much as the next guy, but in the end he already has what
matters most—a NBA city he can call home.
In the end, Chauncey has found a home, his real home in Denver
Colorado with the ultimate place he wants to play and that is with the Denver
Nuggets. The Nuggets acquired Chauncey in a trade for Allen Iverson and
it has invariably been one of the best moves ever in the Nugget organization.
Chauncey has brought leadership and confidence at a different
level to a team that did not have the leadership it needed on the court.
We will see what happens in the near future.
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