LAS VEGAS — If Marquis Teague landed a general manager's gig, Andrew Goudelock would have a job.

"He has to be on an NBA roster," Teague said. "If he's not, that's crazy. He's lights out."

Goudelock, who played parts of the last two seasons with the Lakers, scored 26 points in 27 minutes in the Bulls' summer league opener Saturday. Though the Bulls haven't ruled out adding both a big man and a guard for the veteran minimum exceptions, Goudelock knows he's auditioning for all 30 teams here.

"I'm not done until I get signed somewhere," Goudelock said. "Being able to have a guaranteed contact somewhere, which I haven't had yet going into my third year, is my mission."

Listed at 6-foot-3 but seemingly shorter, the undersized shooting guard averaged 12 points in just 26 minutes for three Lakers postseason games. But he has been fighting odds ever since he played at unheralded College of Charleston.

"I think I've proven myself a lot of times," he said. "But in this business, you have to pay your dues. I've never had an easy road. But I'm ready for it. I'm a worker. I'm motivated. I'm just blessed to have this opportunity."

Coach's corner: Since general manager Gar Forman didn't renew Ron Adams' contact, league sources said the veteran assistant coach has drawn interest from the Thunder, Spurs, Celtics, Pacers, Clippers and Nets. The Bulls remain unlikely to replace Adams on staff.

In other assistant coaching news, former Bull Brian Scalabrine joined Mark Jackson in Golden State, a staff that also includes former Bulls assistant Pete Myers. Scalabrine spent last season working for Comcast SportsNet New England.

"What really moved the needle for me was guys like (Tom) Thibodeau and Doc (Rivers) — guys I really respect — were telling me I should coach," Scalabrine said. "I didn't know if I wanted to yet. Then I started working with (agent) Arn (Tellem's) clients and getting them ready for the draft. And I really had a good time making a difference. With the broadcasting, it was fun, but I wasn't making a difference day in and day out.

"Then when I met with Coach Jackson, after five minutes I was no longer thinking, 'I'm not going to do this.' All I was thinking was, 'How can I convince my wife I can do this?' I sat there for like an hour thinking, 'OK, what can I say to make her believe this is a good move?' I'm hooked."