
Live Tulsa Golden Hurricane season win total, American Conference title, and College Football Playoff longshot markets tracked across the prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius.
TulsaThe Tulsa Golden Hurricane surface on the prediction-market board whenever college football season-win and conference-title markets open, a function of a small private school in Tulsa, Oklahoma with one of the longest football histories in the sport. When the board is live, the team's season win total and American Conference championship contracts carry the most attention, and the market reads Tulsa as a Group of Five outfit whose price hinges on roster turnover and quarterback play rather than blue-blood resources. As a Football Bowl Subdivision member without Power Four revenue, the durable swing factor on Tulsa's number is coaching stability and transfer-portal roster construction. The 2026 season opens in late August; exact prices sit on the live board above when those markets are active.
When the board is live, it structurally slots the Tulsa Golden Hurricane as a College Football Playoff longshot, and the reason is durable: Tulsa plays in the American Conference, a Group of Five league outside the Power Four media-rights tier that funds the deepest rosters. The expanded 12-team Playoff guarantees one spot to the highest-ranked Group of Five champion, so for a team like Tulsa the realistic path to the bracket runs through winning the American outright rather than an at-large bid. The market prices that as a steep climb, which is why Tulsa's Playoff contract trades as a true longshot rather than a contender line. Traders treat the American's recent heavyweights as the conference tier ahead of Tulsa. For the current cents on the Playoff and win-total contracts, see the live board above.
The American Conference is a competitive Group of Five grouping where rosters churn heavily through the transfer portal each offseason, so the market tends to price Tulsa on projected roster strength and coaching continuity more than on prior-year results. Tulsa's conference number reflects a program rebuilding under a head coach early in his tenure, and the board reads the win total as a function of how the quarterback room and offensive line settle before the late-August opener. The schedule structure of American crossover games and rivalry fixtures will drive the race more than any single Saturday. The market gives weight to roster continuity here because portal-era college football makes one-year-to-next results a weaker signal than depth-chart stability.
Tulsa anchors the volume it does for structural reasons tied to its place in the sport. The Golden Hurricane are a longtime FBS program with a national footprint built across decades, and college-football markets price every American Conference member's season win total and conference-title contract once the board opens. The durable swing factors on Tulsa's price are coaching stability, transfer-portal additions, and quarterback play, not any one result. Forward catalysts that move the number include spring practice reports, the summer transfer window, and preseason American Conference media projections ahead of the late-August kickoff. The live board above carries where each contract sits when markets are active; the structural read is that Tulsa trades as a Group of Five program whose ceiling is a conference title and a longshot Playoff path.
When Tulsa's board is live, player-level markets center on the quarterback position and skill players who anchor the offense, because Tulsa's history is defined by prolific passing attacks. The market trades these props on projected usage and roster construction rather than reputation, given the annual roster turnover of the portal era. Award markets such as conference player-of-the-year contracts surface only when a Tulsa player breaks out, which is rare for a Group of Five program but priced when it happens. Point to the live board for current player lines.
Tulsa football traces to 1895 and is one of the oldest programs in the sport, with a peak that came when the 1942 team finished ranked fourth nationally, the highest year-end ranking in school history. The Glenn Dobbs era led the nation in passing for five straight seasons from 1962 through 1966, and the Todd Graham years built a fast-tempo spread offense, cementing Tulsa's identity as a passing program. Tulsa has competed in the American Conference since 2014 and plays at Skelly Field at H.A. Chapman Stadium. That history is why the market treats Tulsa as a credible Group of Five program even in rebuilding years: the program has shown it can field high-output offenses when the roster aligns.
As of June 2026 the 2026 season has not started, so Playoff and win-total contracts trade on offseason projections. Tulsa finished the 2025 season 4-8 (1-7 American), last in the conference and out of bowl contention, in Tre Lamb's first year. See the live board above for current 2026 cents when markets are active.
Tulsa's college-football markets trade across the major prediction-market platforms aggregated by Prediction Genius, with depth and spreads varying by venue. The aggregated view above reconciles season-win-total and conference-title contracts into a single comparison so traders can spot where the book is deepest or the spread tightest.
Prediction Genius covers Tulsa's regular-season win total, American Conference championship futures, College Football Playoff longshot markets, individual game lines, and player props when those markets open for the 2026 season. Coverage spans the full schedule across aggregated platforms.
Tulsa has never won a recognized national championship. The program's high-water mark came in 1942, when the team finished ranked fourth nationally, the best year-end ranking in school history. Tulsa's modern goals center on winning the American Conference and reaching a bowl game.
Coaching stability and transfer-portal roster construction are the biggest durable drivers. As a Group of Five FBS program without Power Four resources, Tulsa's win total and conference-title price hinge on how the quarterback room and depth chart settle each offseason far more than on any single prior-year result.