
Live Arizona Cardinals Super Bowl odds, NFC West race, and roster-move markets tracked across the prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius.
The Arizona Cardinals are one of the longest-shot teams on the board in NFL prediction markets, a function of the league's oldest franchise carrying a thin recent track record into a rebuild. Across roughly ten active contracts in this NFL offseason, the 2026-27 Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures pull the most volume, and the board consistently slots Arizona well behind the conference's contender tier headed by the Los Angeles Rams. Coming off a 3-14 finish as of June 4, 2026, the durable swing factor on the Cardinals price is roster construction and quarterback stability rather than any single offseason event. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The Super Bowl Champion 2026-27 market is the deepest contract Arizona appears in, with more than 63 million dollars in lifetime volume across the field. The board prices the Cardinals as a clear longshot, slotting them below the listed contenders rather than inside the title tier. That structural read follows the roster: a franchise in transition does not command the implied probability that markets assign to the Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers, and other perennial NFC West and conference threats. The gap between Arizona's Super Bowl price and its NFC Championship price tells traders how the market separates winning the conference from winning it all, and for a longshot that spread stays wide. For the exact cents on each contract, the live board above carries the current number.
The NFC West is one of the toughest divisions in football, and that structure drives how Arizona trades. The NFC West Division 2026 market prices the Cardinals near the bottom of the group, with the Los Angeles Rams sitting as the heavy favorite to repeat as division winner. Arizona finished 3-14 as of June 4, 2026, last in the division and well off the pace, which is why the market prices the team on roster strength and a projected rebuild rather than on recent on-field results. What moves this race over the coming season is the divisional schedule, the head-to-head series against the Rams and 49ers, and whether Arizona's offseason additions close the talent gap. The live board reflects where that price sits today.
Arizona's volume comes less from title speculation and more from roster churn. In a June offseason with no games on the calendar, the heaviest interest sits in the futures markets and in a cluster of player-movement binaries: whether Maxx Crosby, David Njoku, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, or Brandon Aiyuk lands with the Cardinals. Each of those contracts currently leans toward No on the board, reflecting the market's read that Arizona is not the favored destination for those names. The durable driver here is the rebuild narrative, quarterback stability, and front-office aggression in free agency and the trade market. Forward catalysts include the rest of the offseason roster cycle and training camp in July. Point to the live board above for the current price on each binary.
The Arizona Cardinals have never won a Super Bowl. Their lone appearance came in Super Bowl XLIII following the 2008 season, a narrow loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers. The franchise dates to 1898 and is the oldest continuously run team in the NFL, with two pre-Super-Bowl league championships, won in 1925 and 1947, on its ledger. That long history without a modern title is why the market treats Arizona as a structural longshot: a franchise whose business model has rarely assumed sustained contention. The 0 Super Bowl count is the durable anchor traders weigh against any optimistic offseason price.
As of June 4, 2026, the Arizona Cardinals trade as a deep longshot in the 2026-27 Super Bowl market, below the listed contenders, with the Los Angeles Rams favored near 16 to 17 cents. Arizona prices around 4 to 8 cents in the NFC West market. See the live board above for the latest cents.
Arizona's futures and roster-move contracts trade across the major prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius, with the deepest books typically on the highest-volume futures. Liquidity is thinner on the niche player-movement binaries, so spreads can widen. The aggregated view above shows the best available price on each contract.
Coverage includes 2026-27 Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC West division winner market, NFL playoff participation, and a set of roster-move binaries on players like Maxx Crosby, David Njoku, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk. Game lines are added once the regular-season schedule begins.
The Arizona Cardinals have never won a Super Bowl. Their only appearance was Super Bowl XLIII after the 2008 season, a loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers. The franchise's last league championships predate the Super Bowl era, won in 1925 and 1947.
Roster construction and quarterback stability are the biggest durable drivers. Coming off a 3-14 season as of June 4, 2026, in the competitive NFC West, the market prices Arizona on rebuild trajectory rather than recent results, which keeps the team a structural longshot across futures.