
Live Colorado Rockies 2026 World Series odds, NL West race, and season win-total markets tracked across the prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Dodgers | 61-33 | — |
Padres | 46-46 | 14 |
Diamondbacks | 45-47 | 15 |
Giants | 38-54 | 22 |
Rockies | 38-56 | 23 |
The Colorado Rockies are one of the most structurally fascinating teams in MLB prediction markets, a franchise whose entire identity is shaped by the thin air of Coors Field. Across roughly ten active contracts, the 2026 World Series futures carry the most volume, and the board consistently slots the Rockies in the longshot tier rather than the contender group. Through 63 games as of June 4, 2026 they sit 24-39, last in the NL West with a run differential of minus 83, and the durable swing factor on their price is the altitude problem (a lineup built to mash at home that cannot replicate the run scoring on the road) rather than any single result. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The market treats the Colorado Rockies as a deep longshot in the 2026 World Series futures, and the reasoning is structural rather than situational. Coors Field inflates offense at home and distorts pitching staffs that have to adjust between thin air and sea level on the road, a problem no front office has fully solved in three decades. The board slots the Los Angeles Dodgers as the clear chalk atop the National League, with the rest of the NL West and the league's perennial spenders filling the contender tier well ahead of Colorado. The pennant-versus-title relationship tells the same story: the Rockies barely register on the National League pennant board, which is the market's way of saying it does not expect this roster near October baseball. The live board above carries the exact cents.
The NL West is one of the toughest divisions in baseball, anchored by the Dodgers and reinforced by the Padres and Giants, and the Colorado Rockies have spent most of the prediction-market era priced as the fifth team in a five-team group. Through 63 games as of June 4, 2026 they sit last in the division, 16.5 games back, and the NL West winner contract reflects that gap with Colorado trading as the longest price on the board. This is a market that prices the Rockies on roster strength and the altitude tax, not on hot stretches. Schedule structure matters here: a lineup that scores at Coors but goes quiet on the road struggles to close ground in a division this deep, and the board prices that road problem directly.
What keeps the Colorado Rockies traded at all is the Coors Field narrative, the most distinctive structural story in baseball. Traders are drawn to season win-total contracts, where the question is not whether the Rockies contend but how far below .500 they finish, and to the over-under markets that turn the altitude effect into a number. The durable swing factor is the pitching staff: a rotation forced to manage a mile of elevation carries an ERA that sits among the worst in the league, and any improvement there is the single thing that could move the price. The All-Star break in July and the late-July trade deadline are the next real catalysts, since a selling franchise can reshape its win-total market. The live board above shows where each contract sits today.
The Colorado Rockies have never won a World Series. The franchise, founded in 1993, reached its only Fall Classic in 2007, riding a 21-of-22 finishing run into a four-game sweep at the hands of the Boston Red Sox. That remains the high-water mark, and the years since have been defined by short playoff windows and long rebuilds. The market weights that history plainly: a team with zero championships and one pennant in more than three decades, playing in the sport's most extreme home park, gets priced as a structural longshot whose ceiling is a wild-card berth, not a title. That durable record is why the World Series contract trades where it does.
As of June 4, 2026, the Colorado Rockies are a deep longshot for the 2026 World Series, trading below 1c and outside the top ten contracts on the board, where the Los Angeles Dodgers lead the National League near 31c. Check the live board above for the exact current price.
Rockies futures trade on the major prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius, with the deepest books on the World Series and NL West contracts. Liquidity is thin given the team's longshot status, so spreads can widen. Prediction Genius compares the current price across every platform that lists the market.
Prediction Genius covers Colorado Rockies World Series futures, the NL West division winner market, season win-total contracts, the 100-win over-under, and daily moneyline, spread, and total markets for every game on the schedule.
The Colorado Rockies have never won a World Series. The franchise reached its only Fall Classic in 2007, where it was swept in four games by the Boston Red Sox. They have made the playoffs five times since their 1993 founding.
The structural driver is Coors Field altitude. A lineup that mashes at home but goes quiet on the road, paired with a pitching staff carrying one of the league's worst ERAs near 5.46, is why the market prices the Rockies as a perennial longshot rather than a contender.