<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ? Keeping tabs on a little brother who works out of town is challenging. Keeping tabs on a little brother who shuttles around the country trying to help his team stay alive in the basketball playoffs, while you are doing the exact same thing ? but about 6,000 miles away ? that is Sebastian Ginobili's challenge these days. Spurs guard Manu Ginobili has two older brothers, Sebastian, 32, and Leandro, 35. The latter has retired from basketball. But Sebastian, or "Sepo," as he is commonly known, plays for Deportivo Libertad, a team in the first division of Argentina's professional basketball league. Thanks to Sebastian's outstanding play ? he is a penetrating guard and adept passer like his little brother ? Libertad advanced to the semifinal round and tipped off a best-of-five series against defending-champion Boca Juniors on Tuesday in Buenos Aires. On Wednesday, Manu began Game 2 of his playoff series on the bench and emerged victorious. On Thursday, Sebastian finished Game 2 of his series on the bench in a disheartening loss. Neither brother saw the other's game. "We talk on the phone no more than once a week," Sebastian said. "I see a few of Emmanuel's games, but they do not show many of them on TV here. Sometimes the schedules do not agree and we are playing around the same time. Recently, he has been able to listen to my games on the radio, over the Internet from the little radio station in my city." </div> Source