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As the great pro wrestler Ted DiBiase taught us all: "Everybody's got a price. Everybody's gonna pay."

Some might cost a little (relatively speaking). Some might cost a lot. But there will be numerous newly minted multimillion-dollar men around the NFL after March 9 when the new league year opens for business.

Both Over The Cap and Spotrac project the 2017 salary cap will rise to $168 million. A December report from USA Today's Tom Pelissero confirms both sites are within the expected range. An official announcement of the exact cap figure will come in March.

Those numbers don't include the amount of rollover money each team takes from the 2016 fiscal year that it can use toward the 2017 salary cap. According to the NFLPA, six teams can carry $13 million or more into the next financial cycle. The Browns claim a staggering $50.1 million in potential rollover spending.

Organizations must ready themselves for a market flush with cap space. Between the 32 franchises, a robust $1.3 billion is projected to be available.

The market should reset itself, and those who are about to enter free agency should expect to experience a windfall unlike any other.

This confluence of factors could provide a shift in the NFL's landscape. Each team has multiple issues to address during a free-agency period with the potential to redefine franchise trajectories. To establish an order, each team is slotted based on its projected cap space, per Spotrac.

Plenty of money is burning holes in the pockets of the NFL's billionaire owners, and they'll discover which players they can buy.