ORLANDO, Fla. — So much for Dwyane Wade.

Phil Jackson has found his shooting guard — and nailed down his starting five — in landing 30-year-old veteran Courtney Lee. He is a less-splashy name than Wade, but fit exactly what the Knicks’ president sought. And credit Joakim Noah for his first assist.

Lee agreed to terms on a four-year contract, according to an NBA source. The deal is worth $48 million — an average of $12 million per year — and only after the Knicks bumped their offer. This will be Lee’s seventh team in a well-traveled but respectable career. He replaces Arron Afflalo, who opted out and signed with the Kings on Saturday for a two-year, $22 million deal.

“Solid background, solid character, very good shooter, plays within himself, had a good year for Memphis and Charlotte,’’ an NBA scout told The Post. “He’s still got a couple of good years left. The guy can make shots.”

The starting lineup is all set on the second day of free agency. The Knicks can now show a backcourt of Derrick Rose and Lee with a frontcourt of Noah, Kristaps Porzingis and Carmelo Anthony. They still need a backup point guard — Austin Rivers is off the board after agreeing to re-sign with the Clippers — and may need more cap space to do so.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BHYPq56jHey/?taken-by=courtneylee&hl=en

According to an NBA source, Noah, who met with the Knicks on Friday, got on the Lee bandwagon.

“Courtney has always been how on their list but they were not on the same range from a salary perspective,’’ the source said. “Noah has been talking to him since yesterday, and Courtney decided he wanted to be with the Knicks and they found common ground.’’

Lee started his career in Orlando and missed an infamous last-second layup as a rookie that turned the 2009 NBA Finals in favor of Jackson’s Lakers. Lee also played the 2009-10 season for the Nets.

The sharpshooter Eric Gordon, who hasn’t played more than 65 games since his rookie year, also had an offer on the table, but landed with Houston on a four-year, $53 million deal, according to The Vertical. Lee has proven more durable than Gordon, missing just 40 games in his career, though he is not as deft a 3-point shooter.

“We need someone who can do multiple tasks, set the table, make plays, has range, can shoot the ball,’’ Jackson said before the signing Saturday at Amway Center, where he watched the Knicks’ summer-league opener.

Reports the Knicks could afford Wade, who is seeking more than $20 million to start, were pure fantasy before the Lee signing.

An NBA source familiar with the Knicks situation said the notion they had a shot at Wade is “so ridiculous.’’

“I would just say that I can’t comment on that right now,’’ Jackson said when asked about Wade.

Pending whether they renounce some of their cap holds on their own choice free agents, the Knicks could have around $3 million of cap space remaining. When they hit the cap, they have a $2.8 million room exception they possibly can use on a backup point guard such as Ramon Sessions, Aaron Brooks or Jarrett Jack.

Jackson acknowledged he conceivably could free up space by trading one of his players — Kyle O’Quinn will make $4 million next year.

The Knicks are still trying to re-sign backups Lance Thomas, Derrick Williams, restricted free agent Langston Galloway and Kevin Seraphin by not using cap space.

That’s why they have put cap holds on those players, so they can sign them once they hit the cap. However, the Knicks may be best off renouncing Williams’ rights because they may not be able to afford his new pact anyway as they don’t have his early Bird rights.

“Not in this one,’’ Jackson said when asked if he will fill all the gaps via cap space. “I don’t think so. But we’re hopeful. We have interest. We have people we are considering. We are appealing to people’s better interest that we’re a team on the move. I think that helps.”

Jackson said he is on “a limited budget.”

“We’re always trying to squeeze something extra out of it,’’ Jackson said. “We’re not deep on talent. We’re trying to do multiple tasks.’’

The Knicks’ meeting with Kevin Durant never happened. Jackson was asked about the A-listers and indicated those get-togethers were more about establishing relationships for next time. Durant could sign a one-year deal with Oklahoma City.

“We hope to make connections with people that have interest or perhaps, if not this time, we have opportunities at later dates,’’ Jackson said.