DENVER — Chauncey Billups settled down his teammates, then stepped up his game.
Billups scored 36 points and made a career-best eight 3-pointers in leading Denver to a 113-84 rout of the New Orleans Hornets, the second-biggest blowout in the Nuggets' playoff history.
Capitalizing on their first home-court edge in a playoff series in 21 years, the Nuggets nearly bested their previous biggest margin of victory, a 141-111 wallop of San Antonio back in 1985.
Billups sank four of his 3s in the third quarter, when the Nuggets began to turn a tight game into a laughter. At one point, they led by 34.
Denver used a 21-0 run spanning the third and fourth quarters to build a 95-69 cushion, a run that was highlighted by Billups' seventh and eighth 3s.
Billups was 8-for-9 from beyond the arc, and the best long-range performance of Billups' career helped negate All-Star point guard Chris Paul's big game.
The All-Star had 21 points and 11 assists but also an abundance of angst as the Nuggets dominated the boards, set the tempo and ran away with it in the second half.
Before tip-off, Hornets coach Byron Scott characterized the key matchup in this series as that of "an old warrior in Chauncey against this young thoroughbred that really wants to get up and down the floor."
Chalk up Round 1 to the grizzled veteran. The Nuggets host the Hornets for Game 2 on Wednesday night.
Billups' arrival in the Allen Iverson trade a week into the season transformed the Nuggets from an afterthought into the Western Conference's No. 2 seed. He took all their immense individual talents and blended them into a cohesive unit that looks primed to finally make some noise in the playoffs.
The Nuggets are one of four teams making their sixth straight postseason appearance, joining Dallas, San Antonio and Detroit.
But while the Nuggets are just 5-20 in the postseason during that stretch, each of the other three have reached the NBA Finals.
Both teams started out shaky as everyone on the floor seemingly had butterflies — save for Billups, who wasn't fazed a bit by the postseason atmosphere. After all, he's been to six straight conference finals with the Pistons and won the NBA title and Finals MVP trophy in 2004.
Billups, who averaged 17.7 points in the regular season sank four 3-pointers and scored 16 points in the first quarter until his teammates settled down and took a 55-47 lead into the locker room at the half.
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