
Anaheim Ducks season recap, offseason outlook, and player movement markets tracked across the platforms covered by Prediction Genius.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Golden Knights | 39-26 | — |
Oilers | 41-30 | 2 |
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| 43-33 |
| 3 |
Kings | 35-27 | 5 |
Sharks | 39-35 | 9 |
Kraken | 34-37 | 16 |
Flames | 34-39 | 18 |
Canucks | 25-49 | 37 |
The Anaheim Ducks are a rebuilding-tier franchise in NHL prediction markets, a young Pacific Division roster whose contracts trade more on development arcs and offseason movement than on title equity. The 2025-26 season is finished. Anaheim closed at 43-33-6 for 92 points, a clear step forward from recent bottom-feeder finishes, but short of a playoff berth as the seventh seed in the Western Conference standings. With the Ducks out and the Stanley Cup Final between Vegas and Carolina still live as of June 4, 2026, the team's active markets have shifted from on-ice outcomes to the offseason: who stays, who moves, and how the front office shapes the next core. The live board above carries the current contracts; the analysis below covers what they mean.
The Anaheim Ducks finished the 2025-26 season at 43-33-6, good for 92 points and a seventh-place standing in the Western Conference, missing the playoffs but posting one of the franchise's most encouraging records of the rebuild. That 92-point season closed the door on Anaheim's championship and conference futures for the year. The market read here is durable: a young Ducks core that took a real step forward but is not yet a contender, with the prediction-market interest sitting on player development and roster turnover rather than on a deep playoff run. The board no longer prices an Anaheim postseason outcome, and the conference-winner contract for the team has resolved. For where any remaining Ducks-tagged contracts sit, the live board above is the source.
With the season over, Anaheim's prediction-market activity moves to the offseason. There is no clean, live next-season Stanley Cup contract for the Ducks worth quoting yet, and the lingering 2025-26 Cup-champion field on the board is contaminated and not a usable Anaheim number. What is real is player-movement trading. Markets like Auston Matthews's next-team contract show how the offseason board prices roster churn across the league, and Anaheim's young core, cap space, and need for a top-line scorer make the Ducks a recurring name in next-team and free-agency speculation. The durable read is straightforward: the Ducks enter the summer with assets and flexibility, and the market will price re-signings, coaching and front-office moves, and any star pursuit as those contracts list. Watch the live board above for the offseason markets as they open.
Anaheim is a smaller-volume market than the league's marquee franchises, and that is structural. The Ducks are a rebuild-stage team in a non-traditional hockey market, so their contracts trade thinner than an Original Six club's. The durable swing factor on Ducks pricing is roster construction, specifically how quickly the young core converts into a playoff team and whether the front office adds a finisher up front. Offseason catalysts drive the bulk of summer interest: the NHL Draft, the opening of free agency on July 1, and any next-team or re-signing markets tied to Anaheim's own players or its pursuit of outside talent. The live board above shows which of those contracts are open and where they sit.
The Anaheim Ducks have won one Stanley Cup, captured in 2007 over the Ottawa Senators behind Scott Niedermayer and Teemu Selanne. Founded in 1993, the franchise reached a second Final in 2003 and remained a Western Conference fixture into the mid-2010s before sliding into a multi-year rebuild. The 2025-26 season's 92-point finish marks the clearest sign yet that the rebuild is turning, even without a playoff berth. That history shapes how the market weights the current roster: a franchise with a title pedigree and a young, ascending core, priced as a team on the way up rather than a finished contender.
As of June 4, 2026, there is no live, clean next-season Stanley Cup contract for the Anaheim Ducks on the board. Their 2025-26 season ended out of the playoffs at 43-33-6, and the lingering 2025-26 Cup-champion field is contaminated. Check the live board above for any open Ducks offseason markets.
The Ducks trade as a lower-volume, rebuild-tier market, so their contracts carry thinner books than marquee franchises. Where the same market lists on more than one platform, prices and spreads can diverge slightly. Prediction Genius aggregates the platforms it covers so you can compare the available quotes in one place.
Coverage includes the Ducks' championship and conference futures during the season, plus offseason markets such as player next-team contracts, re-signings, and front-office moves. With the 2025-26 season complete, the active board skews toward offseason roster-movement markets rather than on-ice outcomes.
The Anaheim Ducks won their only Stanley Cup in 2007, beating the Ottawa Senators in the Final. The franchise, founded in 1993, also reached the 2003 Final. That 2007 title remains the team's lone championship.
Roster construction is the durable driver. The Ducks are a rebuild-stage team whose value hinges on how fast their young core matures into a playoff club and whether the front office adds top-line scoring. Their 92-point 2025-26 finish signals progress, which is why offseason movement markets carry the interest.