The Cleveland Cavaliers have no shortage of drama this summer following Kyrie Irving reportedly requesting a trade from the franchise that drafted him first overall years ago.

Irving, who arguably hit the biggest shot in Cavaliers franchise history when he nailed a game-clinching three in Game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals, is ready to take his talents away from LeBron James to start anew. 

Six teams have reportedly already put in legitimate offers to the Cavaliers for Irving, but Cleveland has held off on making any hasty decisions. Trading Irving will be one of the keys in the Cavaliers franchise going forward, with the stakes elevated by the fact that James could walk as a free agent next summer. 

Irving reportedly has a list of four teams that he'd prefer to land. The Minnesota Timberwolves, Miami Heat, San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks made the cut, and all four of those teams have reportedly put an offer on the table to Cleveland, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN.

Details of what each team is offering are unclear, but the Heat are willing to offer a trade package built around Goran Dragic and Justise Winslow, according to Wojnarowski. The catch? There's "little chance" Cleveland deals with Miami - barring an "overwhelming" offer - because the Heat were the team LeBron left the Cavaliers for.

The real reason the Cavaliers shouldn't be that interested in talking with Miami is the fact a Winslow-Dragic package is nowhere near the kind of value they should receive for Irving. Winslow is an interesting prospect, but he's hardly proven himself as an NBA player. Dragic is 31 years old.

The Cavaliers are playing their hand slowly, waiting for the trade market to fully develop before underselling their young All-Star point guard. Superstar trades have not yielded great returns recently, with the Paul George situation a somber reminder to teams to consider getting out of a bad situation before it gets worse. 

Cleveland has leverage the Indiana Pacers didn't have, though, and can wait for offers to become even more attractive. Irving being under contract for at least two more seasons only adds to the reasons the Cavaliers should wait for an offer they simply can't refuse. 

The Heat put their name in the hat, but with the roster they have, it's hard to see a package that can match the value Cleveland can find elsewhere. Miami lacks the assets needed to get it done, and the Cavaliers have the leverage to kindly decline while mulling better offers.