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With a driving layup in the first quarter Monday night, Stephen Curry became the Warriors’ all-time leading scorer, surpassing the legendary Wilt Chamberlain.

And that was just the start of Curry’s historic performance.

Curry scored 53 points, the ninth 50-point game of his career, and made 10 three-pointers, the 18th game in his career with 10 or more, also an NBA record, and went 15 of 16 from the free-throw line as he fueled a 116-107 victory over the Denver Nuggets at Chase Center.

Curry, in his 12th season with the Warriors, entered the game needing 19 points to pass Chamberlain, who scored 17,783 points in six seasons with the Warriors in Philadelphia and San Francisco. Curry scored 11 points in the first six minutes, including a pair of 3-pointers in the opening 90 seconds. He then made a pair of free throws and three more treys to put him at 17 for the quarter and 17,782 for his career.

“I knew it was close,” Curry said. “Once I got to 11 or so, I was going to go after it.”

Then, with 1:40 to go in the first, Curry put his head down and drove past Nuggets guard P.J. Dozier and shouldered his way through center JaVale McGee before finishing with a right-handed layup. As he ran back on defense, Curry grinned and blew a kiss to the rafters, where Chamberlain’s No. 13 hangs.

“Anytime you hear his name, it’s kind of daunting because some of his records are so hard to eclipse,” Curry said. “To be anywhere near him on any record book, or now be on top, it’s surreal and it’s wild.”

Curry, 33, finished the quarter with 21 points. From the very start, he seemed driven to get the record out of the way quickly.

“It was kind of surprising to see him break that record in the first quarter,” head coach Steve Kerr said, chuckling. “We all figured he’d find a way to get 19 points tonight, but maybe not in the first quarter.”

Curry now leads the franchise, established in 1946, in points, assists and 3-point baskets.

“It’s tough to put into words what Steph means to us as an organization just because of the person he is,” Kerr said. “Obviously the player but the human being, which is so much of why he’s the player that he is — his humility, his work ethic, his focus, his passion for the game. He sets the tone for us every day.”

Said his teammate Damion Lee: “How the organization has turned around and become one of the best organizations in the league over the past 12 years is a testament to who he is and what he’s about.”

Added former teammate Andre Igoudala on Twitter: “A god.”

Vince Carter sent congratulations via Twitter. “It’s amazing watching you do what you do for so long,” Carter wrote. “From an anxious young pup to a 2 time MVP… Shine on!!”

Chamberlain, who last played for the Warriors in 1965, had been the franchise leader in career points scored for 57 years. He’s now second, followed by Rick Barry (16,447), Paul Arizin (16,266) and Chris Mullin (16,235).

“I was here back in 2012 when he got 54 at Madison [Square Garden] and all those amazing games,” Kent Bazemore said. “Full circle, nine years later, passing the great Wilt Chamberlain.”