The Nets traded small forward Bojan Bogdanovic at February’s deadline, and they have been scouting wings ever since. Last month, general manager Sean Marks admitted the position, on a roster riddled with holes, is the biggest one the Nets must fix.

Though they will eye pricey free agents Otto Porter and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, the Nets also have scoured Europe for bargains and potential draftees. If they get lucky on June 22, Rodions Kurucs could be both.

Marks flew to Barcelona in March to see the 19-year-old Latvian. He has been called by scouts a quintessential stash pick and has been compared favorably with Bogdanovic.

“I think he has tremendous, tremendous upside. I do,’’ ESPN international expert Fran Fraschilla told The Post. “He’s a wing player, well put-together, very skilled, 6’9, 225 [pounds]. Again, he’s just a baby. He’s going to be a very good NBA player. He’s got athleticism, he can shoot it, he’s playing with men already.

“There are glimpses of him being a good NBA player, and where you’re drafting him you’re not drafting him as a potential starter for a couple of years. He’s 19, and by the time he’s 24, you’re going to have a guy who could be a very good NBA player — maybe a starter, at worst a very good rotation guy, and if you’re lucky an All-Star. He has high upside, which is what they’re looking for.”

And the Nets are looking for it on the cheap, since a 2013 trade cost them what became the No. 1-overall pick in next month’s draft. Instead, they have picks No. 22 and 27. Will either be high enough to get Kurucs, who is 21st in DraftExpress’ latest mock draft?

“He’s a more athletic Bogdanovic,’’ Fraschilla told The Post. “He’s not as polished as Bogdanovic. He’s not going to get 40 in an NBA game anytime soon. But he’s a tall, rangy small forward who can handle the ball, dunk on you. And he’s just a baby.

“He’s like a really good college freshman. To get him later in the first round is a steal. If he was at Kansas he’d be a very good college freshman. Not great, but they’d be talking about him like Zach Collins at Gonzaga.”

Kurics could be a steal who takes a while to pay off. He can drive and shoot, but played mostly on Barcelona’s B team and needs time to develop.

“This kid wouldn’t surprise me if they leave him in Europe. That’s like putting him in Triple-A and getting him back at 21, let him stay over there and marinate,’’ Fraschilla said. “This kid has [good] upside. … An example is getting a younger Bojan. What the Nets did was trade a [28]-year-old for potentially a 19-year-old Bojan and maybe got a kid who’s playing here in a couple years at 21 on a rookie deal.”

Kurucs, according to reports, was called up from Barcelona’s B team hours before Marks’ arrival, presumably so the Nets’ GM could scout him.

“The Nets see something in him,’’ Israeli writer David Pick said on the Glue Guys podcast. “He’s 6’9, he’s only 19. Other guys we’re talking about here are 21: [Mathias] Lessort is 21, [Anžejs] Pasecniks is 21. This kid’s 19, so they have two years advantage over him.”

The Nets started Caris LeVert at small forward this past season, but prefer him at off-guard, where Randy Foye, 33, isn’t the long-term answer. According to The Vertical, the Nets are interested in off-guard J.J. Redick, who has a $4 million home in DUMBO.

WSB-TV reported the Hawks are interested in Nets assistant GM Trajan Langdon. Both teams declined comment, but a source said Atlanta hasn’t requested permission to talk to him