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NFL free agency preview: The teams to watch

We know all the relevant free agents by each position and have scanned the top 25 overall, but these free agents need teams to sign them.

There will be a wide variety of shoppers at the free agent market when it opens on March 10, from the Jacksonville Jaguars and their staggering $68.5 million in cap room to the New Orleans Saints, who are $22.4 over the cap with less than a week to clear some space. Who are the most interesting teams to track in free agency? Here they are, with all current cap numbers coming from OverTheCap.com:

Jacksonville Jaguars ($68.5 million under the cap): Of course they have to be on here with all that cap space. With $68.5 million in your pocket you can order an Ndamukong Suh at the window and still have enough left over for a Randall Cobb with some Devin McCourty for dessert. If the Jaguars, sick of not finishing over .500 since 2007, want to go crazy and land impact players, they certainly can.

This has also been a team that has been fairly patient in free agency. Linebacker Paul Posluszny might be the last big headline signing, and that was in 2011 (unless guard Zane Beadles got you excited last year). The Jaguars surely want to build the right way, and not tie up a lot of their resources on one free agent class. But with that much cap room to spend and a long playoff drought, it'll be hard to show restraint.

Oakland Raiders ($57.4 million under the cap): Last year's free agency was so bad that "The Raiders signed a bunch of players who can be cut after one year with no long-term ramifications!" actually became a positive rallying cry for Raiders fans. Oof. Oakland couldn't manage to sign one long-term impact free agent despite the most cap room in free agency history, lost Lamarr Houston and Jared Veldheer and the one long-term helper they tried to land, guard Rodger Saffold, had his contract voided because of a failed physical. Bad, bad, bad.

Needless to say, general manager Reggie McKenzie can't strike out again. Signing a bunch of disposable veterans last year was awful given the Raiders' cap situation, but at least McKenzie can try again. And he better land a few difference makers.

[Check out Shutdown Corner's full 2015 free agent rankings – click here for offensive players, and click here for defensive players and specialists]

Green Bay Packers ($32.5 million under the cap): They're not here because they'll spend; general manager Ted Thompson doesn't believe in free agency. They're on the list because of what they can lose.

Green Bay has some very intriguing free agents hitting the market: Cobb, tackle Bryan Bulaga, cornerbacks Tramon Williams and Davon House and linemen Letroy Guion and B.J. Raji among them. Why they didn't just use the franchise tag on Cobb is odd (supposedly they didn't want to upset Jordy Nelson, who would then make less than Cobb, but that's worth losing a 24-year-old coming off a 1,287-yard season?). They'll use that cap room to retain whoever they can, and they don't want to lose much after coming thisclose to winning the NFC championship game last season.

Dallas Cowboys ($6.6 million under the cap): They're still not in a position to spend like crazy, especially after putting the franchise tag on Dez Bryant. They're worth watching because they're the Cowboys and they're always interesting, but mostly for the running back situation. Will they re-sign NFL offensive player of the year DeMarco Murray or let him walk? Would their backup plan include Adrian Peterson? They also have other free agents like offensive tackle Doug Free and linebackers Justin Durant and Bruce Carter who they'll have to make decisions on.

Indianapolis Colts ($41.3 million under the cap): At this moment they have the most cap room of any 2014 playoff team. That changes if quarterback Andrew Luck gets the extension he's now eligible for. But reports out of Indianapolis indicate the Colts might wait a year on Luck, which would give them a one-year window to go nuts in free agency to see if they can get over that New England Patriots hump in front of them. The Colts won't want to tie up all their long-term cap space, but they can be an interesting team on the market.

Philadelphia Eagles ($32.2 million under the cap): Oh, they're definitely on the list now. That number doesn't count the LeSean McCoy trade; NJ.com estimated the Eagles will have $46 million in cap room after McCoy gets traded to Buffalo. Also, inside linebacker DeMeco Ryans and his $6.8 million base salary are now expendable with the addition of linebacker Kiko Alonso. The Eagles need pass rushers and cornerbacks, and could probably use a receiver and a running back. With that cap space, they can check off just about every box. Not a bad spot for a team that was 10-6 last season.

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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!