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Tehama MLB Athletics Colorado OAK—Moss 2-4, 3 RBI COL — Helton 1-4, 1 RBI Houston Giants HOU—Norris, 5-3 SF—Bumgarner, 7-4 NBA FINALS Miami Oklahoma City LATE 8 5 Tracker Tuesday's results Sports 49ers' Rogers is eager SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — There were times in Washing- ton when Carlos Rogers chose to skip offseason workouts with the Redskins even though his contract called for a bonus if he participat- ed. 94 105 Oklahoma City leads series 1-0 Today's games MLB Athletics Colorado OAK—McCarthy, 5-3 COL — Outman, 0-2 Houston Giants HOU—Happ, 4-6 SF—Cain, 7-2 On the tube CYCLING • 2 p.m. NBCSN — Tour de Suisse, stage 5, Trimbach/Olten to Gansingen, Switzerland (same-day tape) MLB • 4 p.m. ESPN — N.Y. Yankees at Atlanta SOCCER • 8:45 a.m.ESPN — UEFA, Euro 2012, group phase, Denmark vs. Portugal, at Lviv, Ukraine • 11:30 a.m. ESPN — UEFA, Euro 2012, group phase, Netherlands vs. Germany, at Kharkiv, Ukraine WNBA • 5 p.m. ESPN2 — Los Angeles at Connecticut Lawyer says jail could end Mayweather boxing career LAS VEGAS (AP) — Lawyers for Floyd May- weather Jr. say the undefeat- ed champion is getting out of shape in solitary confine- ment and may never fight again if he's not released from the cramped Las Vegas jail cell where he began serv- ing a three-month sentence earlier this month. In an emergency motion filed Monday, lawyers asked the court to move him into the general jail population — something that jail offi- cials had avoided out of fear for the celebrity's safety — or put him in house arrest for the rest of his sentence. The jail's ''conduct may cause, not just huge financial harm to Mr. Mayweather, but also huge emotional harm if he is no longer able to pursue his boxing career because of the decondition- ing he has suffered,'' lawyers wrote. Las Vegas police Officer Bill Cassell declined to com- ment on the specific claims in the motion, but said jail administrators were keeping Mayweather in isolation to prevent fights. A hearing on the motion is set for Tuesday afternoon. Mayweather pleaded guilty in December to mis- demeanor domestic battery and no contest to two harass- ment charges that stemmed from an attack on his ex-girl- friend while two of their children watched. He was sentenced to three months and entered the jail June 1. Mayweather's jail stay will be capped at 87 days because the judge gave him credit for three days previ- ously served. It could be reduced by several weeks for good behavior. In the motion, which was first reported by the Las Vegas Review-Journal, lawyers say Mayweather's personal physician, Dr. Robert Voy, visited the jail Friday and was concerned the 35-year-old fighter appeared to have lost muscle tone. Courtesy photos Bill Waters [LEFT PHOTO], shows his first-place bounty.Waters tallied 15.01 pounds, which was enough to take first place at the Nor Cal Basses Individuals Tournament in May.The individuals tournament was held at Whiskey Town Lake. For the team tournament, Waters [ABOVE PHOTO, RIGHT] teamed up with Jesse Sisneros [ABOVE PHOTO, LEFT] and won with a total of 15.54 pounds of bass in their five-fish limit. Courtesy photo CalFire employees celebrate after finishing 28th out of 259 teams at the Reno-Tahoe Odyssey Race June 1-2. Pictured, from left to right, [STANDING] Travis Buick, Eric Johnson, Kevin Lar- son, Jack Harvey, Ryan Kinyon, Dustin Homsley, [BOTTOM] Joe Verska, Matt Brown, Erick Puckett and Jesse Sisneros. Not pictured are Troy Adamson and Shem Hawkins. Special to the DN CalFire employees from the Tehama, Glenn, Butte, Nevada, Yuba and Placer units put together a 12-person relay team and ran the 178 mile Reno-Tahoe Odyssey Race June 1-2. Each member was required to run three legs totaling 13-17 miles depending on the difficulty. The team start time was 12:40 p.m. in Reno, and the race went through Truc- kee, South Lake Tahoe, Carson City, Virginia City and back to Reno. The team finished in just under 24 hours with an average pace of 8.07 minutes per mile. They finished 28th out of 259 teams. 7:15 p.m. CSNB 5:40 p.m. CSNC Regardless of such rewards, Rogers is eager to be around his San Francisco teammates this week as the NFC West champions prepare for what they hope is another run at a Super Bowl after it was right within reach last sea- son. baugh's first chance to run his team through a full offseason rou- tine. Last year, he was hired in January but limited by the lockout. This is also coach Jim Har- ''I want to be out there with the guys competing,'' Rogers said. ''Football is fun. Actually this is only my second time in eight years even doing a full offseason pro- gram. It's something that a lot of older guys really don't go to because it's about learning, kind of doing some of the stuff you did in the season. Especially if you already know the offense and defense, a lot of guys have their own trainer or someone they work with. That's what they do.'' The 30-year-old Rogers has been at 49ers headquarters for organized workouts and minicamp even while nursing a strained right calf that is keeping him out of team drills. Trainers and the Pro Bowl defender are being cautious now to make sure Rogers — who shared the team lead with six interceptions in 2011 and also had 43 tackles — is full strength for training camp starting late next month. ''I just strained it a little bit in the workouts, toward the begin- ning of OTAs,'' Rogers said after Tuesday morning's practice. ''I started doing more today. There ain't no rush. Not worth messing it up even worse. I'm just following their guidelines of what they've got me on. I'm just doing individ- uals today, doing some more run- ning. It's nothing to be worried See ROGERS, page 2B CalFire heat up at relay race, finish 28th out of 259 teams 1B Wednesday June 13, 2012 Raiders welcome back Shaughnessy ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) — For all the focus last season on how running back Dar- ren McFadden's season- ending foot injury ham- pered the Oakland offense, a more over- looked injury had the similar effect on the Raiders defense. Oakland never ade- quately replaced defen- sive end Matt Shaugh- nessy after a season- ending right shoulder injury in the third game of the season, making his return to the practice field on Tuesday a wel- come event. ''I think he's the best in the NFL against the run,'' said teammate Richard Seymour, a seven-time Pro Bowler. ''I can't say that against the pass now for all the sacks a lot of the other defensive ends have. In terms of the run I'll put him out there with any- one. He's definitely developed into a com- plete player. It was a big blow for us when he went down. It messed up our rotation a lot. Guys that weren't nor- mally in there were try- ing to understand what we were trying to do. To get him back healthy this year is big for us.'' Shaughnessy went down while trying to recover a fumble against the New York Jets. He underwent surgery on the shoulder and was placed on season-ending injured reserve. He spent the volun- tary minicamp in April and three weeks of orga- nized team activities as a spectator before final- ly getting his chance to return to the field Tues- day for the start of a three-day mandatory minicamp. ''It felt good being out there. You got to get used to the tempo, but as soon as that happens, should be smooth,'' he said. ''It's one thing to sit and read it in a book, then it's another thing to come out here and do it. And I think actually doing it physically helps me learn it better.'' Shaughnessy, a third- See RAIDERS, page 2B Nor Cal bassers catch wins in May tourney

