<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">ust like every other newcomer to South Texas, Tony Parker learned early on to expect an occasional drought. Under dry conditions, locals are encouraged to get conservative. And for years, that's exactly what Parker did. In the old days, the longer the Spurs would go without scoring a basket, the more hesitant Parker would become. If he took a shot in those situations, he usually did it tentatively. After all, if anyone was authorized to go to the well, it was supposed to be Tim Duncan or Manu Ginobili or David Robinson, not the baby-faced Frenchman with the unreliable jumper. "I was the kid," Parker said. "That wasn't my job." But now? As the Spurs look for a way to keep pace with a younger, more athletic opponent, and still appear prone to extended periods of field-goal shortages? The kid might be the best drought-stopper they have. As resolved as Duncan might be to atone for his brutal offensive showing in Sunday's postseason-opening loss to Denver, and as brilliant as Ginobili always has been at lifting his game to the occasion, neither has the power to take control of the series the way Parker can. Duncan is reliant on someone else to get him the ball, and then he's usually double-teamed. Ginobili is more of a creator, but even he can sometimes encounter trouble getting to the rim. </div> http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/columni...rs.34221cc.html i really wanna see how he does and its tuff to stop san antonio wen he drives to the hole wit his A game