Warriors: Even at No. 30, good shooters await in the draft

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Because the Warriors are expected to match any offer sheet signed by power forward Draymond Green this summer, they won’t have many needs in the draft. Still, they’re always looking to add shooters, and ESPN analyst and international draft expert Fran Fraschilla says there could be several players from whom to choose when the Warriors make the No. 30 overall selection.

Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell, Croatia’s Mario Hezonja and Kentucky’s Devin Booker could be drafted early, but Fraschilla said Georgia State’s R.J. Hunter, Oregon’s Joe Young and UNLV’s Rashad Vaughn — among others — might be available for Golden State.

“The league has gone smaller, and the Warriors are a perfect example of this. Obviously, shooting is at a premium, because it stretches the floor,” Fraschilla said. “Rashad Vaughn is one who is really interesting, because he’ll be one of the younger players (18 until August) in this draft. At 6-foot-5, and coming off what seemed to be a successful first season at UNLV until he hurt his knee, Vaughn is a kid the Warriors could draft and bring him along slowly, because he’s not really going to be ready to help them win for a couple of years.”

Bogut dinged, but OK: Andrew Bogut said his ribs are fine.

In fact, his post-Game 4 X-ray was on his left knee, and that checked out OK, too.

“Everything is good,” the Warriors’ center after Wednesday’s shootaround. “No problems.”

Bogut did grab at his right side a couple of times during the second half of the Warriors’ Game 4 victory at Memphis on Monday, and it was reported by multiple outlets that he had X-rays on his ribs. Bogut said the bigger concern was a tweak he felt in his left knee, and that’s what he had checked and cleared after the game.

Whichever injury was of more concern, Bogut played through the pain and had his best game of the series to that point with nine rebounds, four assists, three steals and three blocked shots as the Grizzlies shot 37.5 percent from the floor and 22.2 percent from three-point range.

Wanted man: Warriors associate head coach Alvin Gentry would be among the front-runners for the Chicago head-coaching job, if the Bulls decide to part ways with Tom Thibodeau, according to unnamed sources in a Basketball Insiders story. Gentry also has been mentioned as a contender for the vacancies in Denver and Orlando.

Gentry, who is making $800,000 this season, says he wants to be a head coach again, but he has said he wouldn’t consider making a move until the Warriors’ season is finished.

“It would have to be a very good situation,” Gentry said. “What we’ve got here is very special, and I’ve been in the league long enough to know that I wouldn’t want to go into a situation that I didn’t think had the potential to be this way.”

No Speights: Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said Marreese Speights (calf) will not play in the Western Conference semifinals, even if the series goes to a seventh game Sunday.

Rusty Simmons is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.