If the Philadelphia 76ers look to move Ben Simmons this offseason, the Cleveland Cavaliers would be a perfect trade partner.

According to Chris Fedor of cleveland.com, the Cavs believe they can put together an “enticing” trade package for Simmons.

Cleveland has a bevy of compelling young players at its disposal including point guards Collin Sexton and Darius Garland, wings Kevin Porter Jr. and Cedi Osman, and forward Larry Nance Jr.

Simmons is a point forward. Philly is going to want a floor general and/or someone who can run their offense if they move him. Both Sexton and Garland can do as such.

Sexton is an efficient outside shooter, proficient off the dribble, and was Cleveland's go-to scorer this season. The Alabama product averaged 20.8 points per game while shooting 38.0 percent from beyond the arc in his second NBA season.

Garland is a steady ball handler. While the 12.3 points and 3.9 assists per game he averaged in his rookie season aren't moving the needle for anyone wary of his career outlook, the Vanderbilt product is speedy off the dribble and has a nice shooting stroke.

Sexton and Garland are each former top-10 picks. There's reason to be optimistic about their respective careers, and they'd be even more dangerous as secondary sources of offense — which they'd be with Joel Embiid and Tobias Harris ahead of them.

While he was a bit inefficient from distance (Porter shot 33.5 percent from beyond the arc this season), Porter averaged a respectable 10.0 points per game off the Cavs bench this season and shot 41.2 percent from said range at USC. Osman is an improving scorer who's a gritty defender, while Nance hits the boards at a considerable rate and has an improving jump shot.

From a pure talent standpoint, Simmons is a star. He's a superb defender, has great court vision, hits the boards, and can be a tenacious finisher off the dribble. For his career, Simmons is averaging 16.4 points, 8.3 rebounds, eight assists, and 1.7 steals per game while shooting 56.0 percent from the field.

Yes, Simmons' recent knee injury and him entering the first year of a five-year, $170 million deal theoretically hurts Philadelphia's chances of getting a haul for the LSU product. That said, his contract presents another potential reason for the Cavs to be interested in Simmons: Kevin Love's contract.

Love is one year into a four-year, $120 million extension with the Cavs. Despite the Cavs reportedly being interested in keeping him, the big man doesn't fit their rebuild. Acquiring Simmons gives Cleveland the chance to offload Love, adding a new player to build around and removing a player whose skill set is better equipped for a contender. Speaking of contenders, Love could be an impactful — albeit pricy — pickup for the City of Brotherly Love (we had to).

Why would the 76ers want a 31-year-old Love who has been mostly used as an outside shooter while making max-level money, especially when they have Embiid, Harris, and Al Horford?

The 76ers went into Monday ranked 13th in the NBA in three-point shooting percentage (36.3 percent). Love is a career 37.0 percent shooter from beyond the arc. He's adept at being a spot-up shooter on a contender, which he did for the Cavs en route to their 2016 championship. Simultaneously, it's not as if all he can do is shoot.

Love is more than capable of being a threat in the post. He has the size to bang inside and has the touch to hit turnaround jump shots and shoot floaters over defenders. A version of Love whose field goal attempts come from inside the paint merely 30 percent of the time is dangerous; there's still some stealthy inside, outside player in him.

Unfortunately for Embiid, his career continues to be derailed by injuries. Oftentimes he's sitting with a minor injury or load management every couple weeks. At his best, Embiid is arguably the best big man in the game, but having depth is pivotal for a contender whose best player has a well-documented injury history.

Embiid, Horford, Love, and Harris would clog up Philly's payroll. In fact, they'd account for roughly $123 million next season. At the same time, the 76ers would also be getting a talented young guard (Sexton or Garland).

Philly could swap Simmons and forward Mike Scott, who's on a soon-to-be expiring contract, for Sexton/Garland and Love. It doesn't sound sexy, but it would be effective.

If an NBA contender aspires to retool, rather than rebuild, piquing the interest of a rebuilding team is a tantalizing prospect. There's pressure on the 76ers to succeed, but Sexton/Garland would be able to feed off Embiid and Harris. They'll have players to lead on for scoring who would take attention off them.

Meanwhile, the possibility of adding a proven player who one could argue still has room for improvement can be tempting for a rebuilding team.

The Cavs may be feeling the heat. They've finished with one of the three worst records in the NBA in each of the last two seasons, been a head-coaching carousel, and haven't turned a corner.

Acquiring Simmons could be a way for Cavs general manager Koby Altman to save face with the organization while garnering some buzz around the team. Plus, they'll be getting Andre Drummond for a full season and would still have a lot of budding players.

The 76ers don't need to blow up their roster, they'll be back in contention with a healthy roster next season. At the same time, there's merit behind moving Simmons if they don't envision him becoming a respectable jump shooter and/or think he and Embiid aren't going to lead them to the promised land. Add young blood and a veteran fit, and see what happens.