from the article :
Only two active NBA players, Tim Duncan and Kobe Bryant, have appeared in more postseason games than Parker. Among all-time NBA Playoff career leaders he ranks 12th in points (with 3,705), eighth in assists (1,034) and eighth in games (196)
pretty impressive
Those numbers say a lot about Tony being a major part of teams that have been good enough to play in a whole lot of playoff games.
Assuming he stays healthy for the next few years and the Spurs don't bottom out when Duncan retires (which now seems much less likely), Parker has a relatively good shot at finishing his career near the very top of the all-time lists in:
playoff games -- at 196, he's 63 short of Derek Fisher(259) for 1st; 5th place at the moment is Kobe with 220, so that's definitely within reach:
Games
259 -- Fisher
244 -- Horry
237 -- Abdul-Jabbar
234 -- Duncan
220 -- Bryant
216 -- O'Neal
208 -- Ainge
196 -- Parker
points -- he's 13th, but will almost certainly pass Havlicek and Hakeem to move into 11th place the next time he plays in the playoffs (he's only 50 points short of Hakeem for 12th, and 71 points short of Havlicek for 11th). One more long playoff run should get him past Larry Bird for 10th. Beyond that, it's at least another 500 points to jump into the top 9:
Points
5987 -- Jordan
5762 -- Abdul-Jabbar
5640 -- Bryant
5250 -- O'Neal
4988 -- Duncan
4761 -- K. Malone
4580 -- Erving
4457 -- West
4419 -- James
3897 -- Bird
3776 -- Havlicek
3755 -- Olajuwon
3705 -- Parker
assists -- he's 8th now, but only 6 behind Kobe for 7th, only 14 behind Pippen for 6th, only 27 behind Nash for 5th, and only 28 behind Bird for 4th. If he plays in the 2015 playoffs, Parker should at least finish that run ahead of Pippen and Bird, and will likely be ahead of Kobe. He won't be chasing Nash for long, even if Nash plays in the 2015 playoffs:
Assists
2346 -- Johnson
1839 -- Stockton
1263 -- Kidd
1062 -- Bird
1061 -- Nash
1048 -- Pippen
1040 -- Bryant
1034 -- Parker