The Bulls laid out their free-agency plan in full detail — add versatile, tough-minded veterans who can help bring along their young core.

Within the first 15 hours of NBA free agency, they have acted on those goals.

The latest move came early Monday, when the Bulls agreed to a deal that will net them guard Tomas Satoransky from the Wizards in a sign-and-trade transaction. Satoransky, 27, will sign a three-year deal worth roughly $30 million that, likeforward Thaddeus Young’s verbal agreement Sunday night, carries guarantee protection on the final season, a source said.

The Bulls will send the Wizards a 2020 second-round pick and the right to swap draft order on a 2022 second-round pick, a source said. The Bulls also eliminated protections on the 2023 second-round pick they sent to the Wizards in the Otto Porter Jr. trade, a source said.

Satoransky, a native of the Czech Republic, averaged 6.6 points and 3.7 assists in three seasons with the Wizards, who drafted him in the second round in 2012. He has extensive overseas professional experience.

At 6-foot-7, he can play point or shooting guard as well as some minutes at small forward, adding versatility to Jim Boylen’s multi-ballhander system.

He is known primarily as a push guard who constantly attacks the basket, although he also is a career 40 percent 3-point shooter in limited attempts.

Satoransky experienced his best NBA stretch last season. Starting for the injured John Wall, he averaged 10.7 points, 6.2 assists and 4.3 rebounds in 54 starts that included a triple-double. Overall last season, he averaged 8.9 points, 5.0 assists and 3.5 rebounds.

Satoransky will battle Kris Dunn and first-round pick Coby White for the starting point guard job, although it’s likely White, 19, will be brought along slowly. Satoransky has experience starting or coming off the bench, and his positional versatility makes him effective in multiple lineups.

Also like Young, he’s durable. He missed only two games last season, and they were for the birth of his child.

Overnight Monday, several of the guards linked to the Bulls in free agency — Patrick Beverley, Cory Joseph, Ish Smith — agreed to deals. But the Bulls always balked at a third season for the local product Beverley, who had made clear his desire to play in his hometown. They had their sights set on Satoransky as soon as Darren Collison announced his retirement Friday.

Now the Bulls plan to exhale and see how the market shakes out, still planning to address shooting or add another big man with all or part of their $4.76 million “room” exception.

Satoransky was involved in a memorable play at the United Center in February 2018 when Bobby Portis got ejected from a game for a flagrant-two foul on Satoransky. Portis and then-Wizards guard Jodie Meeks exchanged some social-media trash talk about the play.

The Bulls can add Satoransky into cap space without renouncing restricted free agent Ryan Arcidiacono, sources said. Arcidiacono has strong standing within the organization and makes sense as a depth player or insurance should a suitable trade for Dunn emerge.