Top 59 Quotes & Sayings by Chauncey Billups

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American athlete Chauncey Billups.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Chauncey Billups

Chauncey Ray Billups is an American professional basketball coach and former player who is the head coach for the Portland Trail Blazers of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played 17 seasons in the NBA. After playing college basketball with the Colorado Buffaloes, he was selected third overall in the 1997 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics. A five-time NBA All-Star, a three-time All-NBA selection and two-time NBA All-Defensive selection, Billups played for the Celtics, Toronto Raptors, Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Detroit Pistons, New York Knicks, and Los Angeles Clippers during his NBA career. He won the NBA Finals MVP in 2004 after helping the Pistons beat the Los Angeles Lakers in the Finals, and was given the nickname "Mr. Big Shot" for making late-game shots with Detroit. The Pistons retired his No. 1 jersey in 2016.

For me, I think Andre Drummond is going to be a superstar. We didn't have that. We had a lot of very good players. I think Drummond will be a superstar if he continues to work. The media, everyone is behind him.
I got into a lot of fights, but it wasn't because of my name. Being from the neighborhood with a name like Chauncey, people think I got picked on. But a lot of strange names come out of the neighborhood.
I'm obviously not a politician, nor do I have the desire to be one, but I'm a conscious citizen. — © Chauncey Billups
I'm obviously not a politician, nor do I have the desire to be one, but I'm a conscious citizen.
I'm not the fastest player, but you can't really play up on me because my handles are good enough where I can get around you. But you can't play off of me, because I can shoot. And if smaller guys try to defend me, I'll back them down. I'm a good post player.
Anytime you can grace the cover of any videogame, that means that you're on that level. That you're one of the best.
In any rebuilding process, I feel like there's probably going to be two or three coaches.
I wanted to be one of the best players of my era at my position. And I did that, and I earned that. No one gave that to me. I earned every single thing.
I can do a lot more by shooting from outside, score inside, penetrate, and make opportunities for others.
The game was very, very good to me. I felt like I was equally as good to the game the way I played it and the way I respected it and the way I carried myself through the process.
As I have conveyed before, ultimately I would like to lead a team's basketball operation and be a part of a successful franchise.
Quite frankly, Minnesota was where my career kind of turned around, and it all had to do with Flip Saunders and his coaching prowess and his system.
If you give him a 3-point shot, you might as well count it. I'd rather have Steph Curry beat me 14 points and 14 assists than let him get 40. Because his 40 is just so loud. And it's because of those 3s.
I liked being home playing in front of my people, but I just did not like the situation because I was playing shooting guard, and that is not my position. I would play it if someone like Rip got hurt, but to do it for an entire season, that is not my position. I got it done when I was asked to do. But inside, I know that is not me.
My game is - and I'm not saying I'm slow or anything like that, but my game is mental. My game is shooting; my game is efficiency. If I'm healthy, I feel like I can be effective for a long time.
I played football first. I love football. I'm a die-hard Broncos fan. I loved football, but in the offseason, I started playing basketball, and I just fell in love with the game. I've been playing basketball ever since 5th grade.
There is a good and a bad way to handle everything. — © Chauncey Billups
There is a good and a bad way to handle everything.
Magic was always my favorite. I think Jordan was the best player ever, but Magic was my personal favorite.
Nobody loses gracefully and easily, but there is a way to go about it.
I love my life. I love this ESPN thing; it's been fun.
I'm thinking about being the best I can be at ESPN in the studio.
A lot of time, you play well and you do good work, but you are not on a good team, so it really doesn't mean anything.
I am a big music guy. Hip-hop, R&B, old school, jazz.
The kind of leader and teammate that I was, at every stop I made, I was always honest with guys and honest with myself. I think that was the reason I grew to have the reputation I had in the league.
I have great respect for Dan Gilbert and the Cleveland Cavaliers, and I greatly appreciate the discussions we had regarding their organization.
I'm the kind of guy who has to be two feet in if I am going to give my best effort, so broadcasting is something I'm looking at long-term.
It wasn't that I knew Kyrie wanted to be traded or not, or him and LeBron had a beef. I don't know any of those things.
I persevered, sustained, and continued to work hard and finally got my opportunity in Detroit, and I never turned back from that point. That's what made it so sweet to me to win a championship after what I went through. I had to scrap and fight to get through it, and to reach the pinnacle made it even sweeter.
I can remember me and my cousin always fighting. He was a big Bulls and Michael Jordan guy.
I'm from Denver, and basketball there isn't near what it is out in Chicago or Detroit or L.A. There weren't that many great players to come out of the area; I was the best player in high school. I was Player of the Year four straight years for the state. As a freshman, I was State Player of the Year; I was Mr. Everything, so I was a phenom.
We don't just hop out of bed, scratch our eyes, and become an NBA baller. It's a process. It's a tough grind that you have to go through that people don't understand.
That's kind of been my entire career, the stress and pressure.
I got 'Smooth' when I was growing up. I got 'Bigshot' playing in Detroit. People who know me from Denver call me 'Smooth.'
Everybody has their own desires.
The confidence level that Steph is playing with now, obviously, you won't totally stop him. If I'm playing against him right now, I think I'd try to pick him up full court, get the ball out of his hands, try to be a little physical.
I think the most important position in the league now is the point guard.
I'm a lot more serious on the court. I'm probably a lot more intense than some of these guys thought I would be. Off the court, I'm a totally different dude. But my passion's to win, and I'm a perfectionist out there.
My first couple of years in the league left me very unstable. I had some times where I played well, and I had some times were I really did not get the opportunity. After Rick Pitino gave up on me my first year, people were like, 'He can't play.' So I had to get over that hump.
I don't want to be fired after two seasons and risk never getting another opportunity to coach. — © Chauncey Billups
I don't want to be fired after two seasons and risk never getting another opportunity to coach.
I always wanted to retire a Piston anyway. That's where I stayed the longest and had most of my success. I always wanted to be remembered as a Piston.
What bothered me more than if LeBron left or not was that I didn't think they had great assets if you have to do a rebuild. It was more that than Bron. Bron and I have always had an amazing relationship.
I drive a Range Rover almost every day, but my favorite is my '69 SS Camaro.
Me not being able to play the way that I can play, that's when you kind of know it's that time.
I've accomplished everything I tried to accomplish in basketball.
My wife cooks, I clean. Then I go to practice, come home, and take a two hour nap. I wake up, shave my head, then it's time to ball.
When I signed back with Detroit, I signed to retire a Piston.
People only see you on TV and riding around like stars, but they don't see behind the scenes how much time you have to put in working out. The lifting, the eating habits, trying to change all that so you can be that guy on TV, to be a baller, that's what people don't understand.
Not that I shouldn't have been traded - everyone gets traded at some point. But the way that it went down wasn't justifiable.
I'm fully aware that every time I do anything, good or bad, somebody's watching.
If it ain't rough, it ain't right
I'm never nervous. Not in high school, not in college. That's just the way I am.
It's all about guts. I've had so many ups and downs, I'm not scared of being down. — © Chauncey Billups
It's all about guts. I've had so many ups and downs, I'm not scared of being down.
Even when it's midnight, people are watching you. It's difficult to be in the spotlight all the time.
This is a tough, tough life when things aren't going your way.
I'm a point guard, I've always been a point guard, I've played point guard all my life. Personally, I feel the best point guards make other players look better and create their own shot. I fit in that category.
I've always believed in my abilities. Nobody ever gave me anything in life. I had to work for everything I got. It may have gotten really rocky for a while, but I persevered, because I'm not afraid of failing.
I get a lot more confidence winning games playing defense than winning the run-and-gun game.
I play harder when my family is watching.
In the NBA, it's about patience.
My guys look for me to step up in that magnitude and I take the challenge every time. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose, but you've got to have a guy that will take those shots and deal with the consequences.
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