Colleges: Holy Cross named Marquette assistant Brett Nelson its next men’s basketball coach. Athletic director Marcus Blossom announced the hire less than a month after Bill Carmody retired. Nelson, 38, spent the last five seasons at Marquette, including two as associate head coach. ... Louisiana-Lafayette baseball coach Tony Robichaux, who earned nearly 1,200 career wins and led the Ragin’ Cajuns to the 2000 College World Series, died at 57. Robichaux suffered a heart attack on June 23.

NBA: A person with knowledge of the situation says the Hawks have veteran F Chandler Parsons in a trade which sent Miles Plumlee and Solomon Hill to the Grizzlies. The person spoke with AP on condition of anonymity because the trade can’t be finalized before Saturday. ... Bulls C Wendell Carter Jr. will have surgery next week to repair an abdominal muscle injury. The Bulls expect him to be ready for training camp. ... The Pistons agreed to a two-year deal with F Markieff Morris, who has averaged 11.6 points and 5.5 rebounds during his eight-year career.

NFL: Former Giants backup QB and Kentucky star Jared Lorenzen, 38, died after years of health problems related to his weight, his family said. Jeremy Schapp, the ESPN personality who interviewed Lorenzen for his “E:60” series last year confirmed the death on Twitter, citing a text to his producer from Lorenzen’s mother Janet: “Lorenzen’s mother Janet confirmed that Jared died today. He was only 38. Janet said, ‘I lost my sweet boy today after a long hard fight.’ ” He backed up Eli Manning on the Giants’ 2007 Super Bowl-winning team. ... Cowboys RB Ezekiel Elliott won’t be suspended over an incident in Las Vegas involving Elliott and a security guard. Commissioner Roger Goodell determined Elliott didn’t violate the league’s personal conduct policy. He was suspended for six games in 2017 over domestic violence allegations.

Olympics: The U.S. Olympic Committee’s administrative costs more than doubled in 2018 over the previous year as it dealt with a $5.2 million investigation into its handling of the Larry Nassar sex-abuse cases and paid a $2.4 million severance to its former CEO. The payments to the Ropes & Gray law firm, former CEO Scott Blackmun and the Covington & Burling law firm helped raise the USOC’s administrative and general costs to $31.2 million in 2018, compared with $14.9 million the previous year.

— News services