Use a "gentle" teardrop" shape, and you'll be fine. If you are going to use bronze valve guides, have them "bulleted" to reduce obstruction. Even if you are not using roller rockers, a gentle street cam will put less stress on the valve guide than a more aggresive profile. Paying close attention to valvetrain geometry will also help to compensate for the lack of support on the guide.
When you use the teardrop shape method, you might enlarge the port at that point to compensate for the restriction. IMHO, just smoothing down the whole area will pay dividends without the need of going crazy, or sacrificing valve guide life. After all, these are cast iron heads. If you look at the AL SCP heads, you'll notice that we use a fairly large boss, that's there to improve valve guide support, compensated by a carefully designed shape. The tendency on race heads nowadays is to achieve reliability, because at 8000 rpms, roller rockers or not, if you risk failure, you'll loose the race.