CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Do you have a Cavs question that you'd like to have answered in Hey, Joe? Submit it here or tweet him @joevardon.

Hey, Joe: Who will guard who between Cleveland and Golden State? Do the Cavaliers have an advantage at the bench position if team starters balance each other out? -- Vaman, Miami

Hey, Vaman: We find out the answer to your question on Christmas Day when the Warriors visit. Assume Kyrie Irving guards Stephen Curry, J.R. Smith guards Klay Thompson, and LeBron James guards Kevin Durant. Probably not much crossmatching at those three spots, unless coach Tyronn Lue (or, for that matter, the Warriors' Steve Kerr), wants to switch either of the guards. I'm wondering if Cleveland's center, Tristan Thompson, guards power forward Draymond Green, while Kevin Love takes Warriors' center Zaza Pachulia. Green is a terrible matchup for Love and the Cavs were in the Finals when James guarded him. With the rosters as currently constructed, James has to play Durant straight up.

Hey, Joe: Why wasn't Mo Williams at the Cavs' ring ceremony? He helped win a championship and he's still part of the roster. -- Jimmy, Brunswick

Hey, Jimmy: Bringing Williams to The Q never crossed the Cavs' mind. He's not welcome, after picking up his $2.2 million option, deciding to retire the day training camp opened, and then electing to have knee surgery without filing retirement papers or negotiating a buyout with the Cavs, forcing them to keep him on their roster and pay him (while they search for a team to take his contract off their hands).

please explain why LeBron never met with the Undertaker. Seemed so weird — The Freebird (@JNickerson33) November 2, 2016

Hey, @Jnickerson33: I love this question. For a quick review, The Undertaker was stationed outside the locker room at The Q for an uncomfortable hour (give or take) on opening night, apparently to meet James (with cameras and cell phones rolling for the fine folks at WWE to capture the moment and spread the footage around the globe). The reason, besides the huge publicity it would generate for the WWE, was James wore a T-shirt from Homage with The Undertaker's likeness on the front on practice day prior to Game 5 of the Finals.

James arrived at The Q before the wrestler and his posse, and claimed not to know he was out there. But of course the word immediately spread through the locker room that The Undertaker was waiting outside.

Here's a life lesson. If you don't have an appointment, don't already know James personally, aren't a business associate or a small child, the odds of "meeting" James before or after a Cavs game in or near the locker room are not great. I once saw Houston Astros stud second baseman Jose Altuve try to get a meeting with James after a game against the Houston Rockets in Texas. The request came through various team PR officials. Let's just say James had no interest.

Another rule. James is not cool with someone purposefully trying to make money or gain fame through him, away from the court. In other words, no PR stunts that don't benefit James. He wore an Undertaker T-shirt. For him, that's enough.

are the cavs trying to go on a 10-15 game win streak to start off? — David Fields (@BrownsCavsCats) November 2, 2016

Hey, @BrownsCavsCats: Interesting question. Outside of, say, the Cleveland Browns or the Philadelphia 76ers of the last couple seasons, I can't think of any team that doesn't "try" to win every game. So, at 5-0, the Cavs are on pace for an 82-game winning streak. Probably not going to happen. That being said, this is not a group that's trying to make a run at the Warriors' league record of 73 wins set last season. A combination of a deep, talented, cohesive roster and a light schedule has made the Cavs winners of five straight with (potentially) more to follow.

#heyjoe Do you think Shump will be traded this season? — Hollywood (@JR_MESS) November 2, 2016

Hey, @JR_Mess: Yes I do, although I'll say Iman Shumpert's hot start this season is a bit of a Catch 22 when it comes to trading him. Shumpert is averaging 7.2 points off the bench, but he's shooting a career-high 47.6 percent from the field and 54.5 percent from 3-point range. He's also averaging 1.6 steals per game. In other words, through five games he's more than recovered from his dismal season a year ago.

At 26, he's playing a lot like the player the Cavs thought they were getting when they traded for him in January, 2015. With three years and $30 million left on his contract, playing this well would make him more enticing for a team to make an offer to the Cavs. But if Shumpert is going to be this good, who could the Cavs get for him that would be an upgrade? I know, I know, you guys are the ones supposed to be asking the questions. The point is, the Cavs aren't going to trade Shumpert unless the deal is an upgrade to the talent on the court.

complete speculation, but do you think LeBron would have been as compelled to return if the '07 Indians won the world series? — Stop RT the gun girl and other grifters (@demeatloaf) November 2, 2016

Hey, @demeatloaf:

I mean, this is an intriguing question, one that's impossible to answer. Winning a championship for Cleveland was not the

only

reason he returned in 2014, and an Indians World Series nine years ago would not have counted for the Cavs. Remember, the franchise's only championship was the one James and Co. delivered last season. At any rate, this is a BIG IF, as the Tribe fell to Boston in the ALCS after, sigh, blowing a 3-1 lead.