
Live Creighton Bluejays national championship odds, Big East race, and NCAA Tournament markets tracked across the prediction markets covered by Prediction Genius.
The Creighton Bluejays are one of the more consistently traded mid-tier programs in college basketball prediction markets, a function of a Big East program that turned regular NCAA Tournament appearances into a durable brand. The Jesuit school in Omaha, Nebraska plays at the CHI Health Center, and across the active contracts its national title and Final Four futures carry the most volume during the season, with March Madness props spiking every spring. The durable swing factor on Creighton's price is roster turnover and recruiting in the transfer-portal era, not any single result, and as of June 2026 a coaching transition sits at the center of that read. When season and tournament markets are live, the board prices Creighton as a tournament-caliber name rather than a national-title favorite. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above when active.
When tournament markets are live, the board consistently slots Creighton outside the national-title favorite tier and inside the broader pool of credible NCAA Tournament programs. That structural read traces to a clear fact: the Bluejays have never won a national championship in 27 NCAA Tournament appearances, and their ceiling is defined by the 2023 Elite Eight, the deepest run in program history alongside a 1941 trip to the same round. Markets treat title futures for a program like Creighton as longshots by construction, where the value sits in Final Four and Sweet Sixteen reach-the-round markets rather than the championship line itself. The competitive set traders anchor to is the Big East's upper tier, where UConn's back-to-back titles set the conference's championship bar.
Creighton competes in the Big East, a guard-driven, high-major conference where UConn, Marquette, and St. John's headline a deep grouping that rarely produces a runaway. The durable read on Creighton's conference markets is that they price the program on roster strength and continuity more than on any single week of results, because the Big East schedule is dense enough that one bad stretch rarely settles the standings. That structure makes Creighton's regular-season and conference-tournament markets reactive to portal additions and frontcourt health. Over a season the race turns on the home-and-home series against the conference's other contenders and on Creighton's ability to defend the CHI Health Center floor, not on today's exact conference price.
Creighton draws steady prediction market volume for a non-blueblood because the program is a fixture in the bracket conversation and carries genuine March narrative gravity. The durable swing factors on its price are roster construction and the transfer portal, which now reshape the Bluejays' outlook every offseason, and the program enters a new structural chapter after the March 2026 coaching change. Forward catalysts that move these markets are predictable: the November tip-off, the Big East slate in January and February, Selection Sunday in March, and the tournament itself. Reference the live board above for where Creighton's contracts sit on any given day; the analysis here covers what durably drives those numbers across a season.
Creighton anchors player-level markets during the season because the program has a track record of producing draftable guards and wings whose props draw action. The most durable example is Doug McDermott, the 2014 national player of the year and one of the most prolific scorers in NCAA history, whose era cemented Creighton as a destination for scoring talent. Conference player-of-the-year, all-Big East, and NBA-draft-position markets are the recurring slots, and the players who anchor them shift year to year with the roster. Point to the live board for current props; the structural reason these markets trade is Creighton's reputation for developing offense-first prospects.
Creighton has reached the NCAA Tournament 27 times and the Elite Eight twice, in 1941 and 2023, but has never advanced to a Final Four or won a national championship. That history frames how the market weights the roster: a program built to make the bracket and occasionally threaten a deep run, not to open as a title favorite. The long Greg McDermott era, the winningest in program history, defined this identity before the program turned to its next chapter. The still-chasing-a-Final-Four angle is the durable story these markets price every March.
As of June 2026, Creighton has no active 2026 national title or NCAA Tournament contracts because the 2025-26 season and 2026 tournament are over. Michigan won the 2026 title, beating UConn 69-63. Creighton's 2027 futures populate the board once next season's markets open.
Creighton's markets trade on the major prediction-market platforms Prediction Genius aggregates, with the deepest books appearing around national title and NCAA Tournament futures during the season. Prediction Genius compares prices side by side so traders can spot the better number across platforms as more get added.
Prediction Genius covers Creighton's national championship futures, Final Four and reach-the-round markets, Big East regular-season and conference-tournament markets, win totals, and player awards such as conference player of the year and NBA draft position. Coverage scales up each spring during March Madness.
Creighton has never won an NCAA national championship. Across 27 tournament appearances, the program's high points are Elite Eight runs in 1941 and 2023. It has never reached a Final Four, which remains the franchise's defining unfinished goal.
Roster construction is the biggest durable driver. In the transfer-portal era Creighton's outlook resets each offseason, and the program's 2026 coaching change from Greg McDermott to Alan Huss adds a structural swing factor that markets will price into its 2026-27 futures.