
Live Purdue Boilermakers 2026 season-win totals, Big Ten race, and College Football Playoff odds tracked across the prediction markets on Prediction Genius.
PurdueThe Purdue Boilermakers are a Big Ten football program based in West Lafayette, Indiana, traded on prediction markets through season-win totals, conference-finish lines, and College Football Playoff futures. The structural read is durable and unflattering: Purdue has not won a single Big Ten game across the last two seasons, which keeps the market pricing the Boilermakers near the bottom of the conference tier. The durable swing factor is roster rebuild under second-year head coach Barry Odom rather than any one result. With the 2025 season and 2025-26 Playoff finished, the live board carries season-win and futures lines only when 2026 markets are active. Exact numbers sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what they mean.
When 2026 College Football Playoff and national-title markets are active, the board slots the Purdue Boilermakers firmly in the longshot tier. The reason is structural, not a single bad week. Purdue has never won a consensus national championship in a program that dates to 1887, and its most recent national relevance came in 1966, when the Boilermakers reached the Rose Bowl. The market treats CFP futures here as a deep-fade contract, with the season-win total carrying the meaningful volume and the Playoff line functioning mostly as a tail bet. Watch the live board above for where the price sits once 2026 futures open.
The Big Ten is the toughest grouping in college football, and Purdue enters 2026 having gone 0-9 in conference play in 2025 and winless in the league the year before. That two-year structural hole is what the market prices, not roster talent on paper. The signature rivalry game is the Old Oaken Bucket against Indiana, which is now the defining stress test on the schedule: Indiana won the 2025 national championship by beating Miami 27-21, and routed Purdue 56-3 in the 2025 Bucket game. Season-win-total markets price the Boilermakers on results, and the durable read is a program selling rebuild, not contention.
Volume on Purdue concentrates in two durable places: the season-win total and the Old Oaken Bucket rivalry line. The structural driver is the rebuild story under Barry Odom, hired from UNLV ahead of 2025, whose job is to lift a roster that went 2-10 in 2025. The forward catalysts are concrete and dated: spring roster and transfer-portal additions, the late-August 2026 season opener, and the November Bucket game against national-champion Indiana. The live board reflects where sharp money lands as those windows arrive; reference it for the current number rather than any figure quoted here.
Purdue's durable identity is the "Cradle of Quarterbacks," the program that produced Bob Griese, Len Dawson, and Drew Brees. That lineage is why the market and national audience still track the Boilermakers despite a thin championship resume: zero consensus national titles and one Rose Bowl appearance, after the 1966 season. The franchise plays at Ross-Ade Stadium, which opened in 1924. Recent trajectory is the harder truth the market weights heavily, back-to-back winless Big Ten campaigns through 2025 establish a rebuild floor, and that history is why CFP and conference futures price Purdue as a longshot until on-field results move the line.
As of June 2026, Purdue finished the 2025 season 2-10 overall and 0-9 in the Big Ten, its second straight winless conference year. The season ended with a 56-3 loss to Indiana in the Old Oaken Bucket game.
Purdue season-win totals and Big Ten futures trade on the major prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius, with book depth and spreads varying by platform. When a contract lists on more than one venue, the board surfaces each price so traders can compare implied probabilities directly.
Prediction Genius covers Purdue season-win totals, Big Ten conference-finish lines, College Football Playoff and national-title futures, and rivalry-game markets such as the Old Oaken Bucket against Indiana when they are active on the board.
Never. Purdue has not won a consensus national championship since the program began in 1887. Its peak season was 1966, when the Boilermakers reached and won the Rose Bowl, still the high-water mark of the franchise.
The roster rebuild under second-year head coach Barry Odom. Coming off a 2-10 season and two straight 0-9 Big Ten years, the market prices Purdue on demonstrated results, so improvement in the win total is the durable driver of where futures settle.