
Calgary Flames season recap, offseason player movement, and next-team markets tracked across the prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Golden Knights | 39-26 | — |
Oilers | 41-30 | 2 |

| 43-33 |
| 3 |
Kings | 35-27 | 5 |
Sharks | 39-35 | 9 |
Kraken | 34-37 | 16 |
Flames | 34-39 | 18 |
Canucks | 25-49 | 37 |
The Calgary Flames are one of the perennially traded Canadian franchises in NHL prediction markets, a mid-market team whose price swings on retooling decisions more than on any single result. The Flames finished the 2025-26 regular season 34-39-9 for 77 points, 14th in the Western Conference and outside the playoff field, a campaign that puts the franchise squarely in retool territory. With the season over and the Stanley Cup Final still being contested between Vegas and Carolina as of June 4, 2026, the Flames have no live championship contract worth quoting. The board has shifted to offseason questions: player movement, coaching, and roster construction. The live markets sit above; the analysis below covers what the recap and offseason outlook mean for traders.
The Calgary Flames closed the 2025-26 regular season at 34-39-9, good for 77 points and the 14th seed in the Western Conference. They finished well back of a playoff spot, scoring 212 goals against 259 allowed for a negative goal differential. That profile, a bottom-third finish in a deep conference, is the durable read prediction markets carry into the offseason. The Flames are not a championship-tier franchise on the current board; they are a club the market prices as rebuilding, where the relevant questions are about direction rather than a deep playoff run. There is no live 2025-26 Stanley Cup contract for Calgary to quote, and the next-season Cup futures market has not opened cleanly, so any championship framing here would be fabricated rather than sourced from the board above.
With the season finished, the Flames' prediction-market gravity moves to roster construction. The most prominent offseason contract tied to Calgary on the board is a player next-team market: where star talent lands once free agency and trades open. Those markets resolve on official team announcements, not speculation, which is why they price on durable signals like cap space, contract status, and a club's stated direction rather than rumor velocity. For a 77-point team, the durable swing factor is whether the front office leans into a full retool or tries to retool on the fly. The live board above shows the current player-movement contracts and their prices; the structural point is that Calgary's offseason value trades on personnel decisions, not on a championship line that does not exist.
Calgary's prediction-market volume in the offseason is driven almost entirely by player-movement questions rather than team futures. The Flames anchor a next-team market for a marquee skater, and those contracts pull volume because they touch multiple fan bases and resolve on a binary, official-announcement outcome. The durable drivers are cap room, the franchise's retool timeline, and the gravitational pull of a Canadian market that draws national attention. Forward catalysts are calendar-fixed: the NHL Draft, the July 1 free-agency opening, and any trade activity through the summer. Each of those windows is when the next-team and roster contracts move. Point to the live board above for where those prices sit today; the structural read is that Calgary is an offseason-personnel story, not a contender story.
The Calgary Flames have won one Stanley Cup, in 1989, when they beat the Montreal Canadiens to claim the only title in franchise history. The franchise originated as the Atlanta Flames in 1972 and relocated to Calgary in 1980, carrying the name north. The Flames reached the Final again in 2004, losing a seven-game series to Tampa Bay. That history matters for the market because Calgary is a single-championship franchise whose business case rests on returning to contention, not on defending a recent title. A 34-39-9 finish in 2025-26 is the kind of result that pushes a one-Cup franchise toward a reset, and the offseason markets above are where the prediction-market read on that reset gets priced.
As of June 4, 2026, there is no live, clean Stanley Cup contract for the Calgary Flames; the season is over and the 2025-26 Cup field is contaminated. The most prominent Calgary-linked offseason market is the Auston Matthews next-team contract, where the favorite is Matthews staying with Toronto or retiring at 14c. See the live board above for current prices.
Calgary's offseason markets trade on the major prediction-market platforms aggregated by Prediction Genius, with player next-team contracts carrying most of the current volume. Depth and spreads vary by platform and by how heavily a given player-movement question is traded. Compare the live prices on the board above for the exact picture.
Prediction Genius covers Calgary Flames player next-team markets, conference and series-outcome contracts where the Flames appear, and any next-season futures as they open. With the 2025-26 season over, the active coverage centers on offseason player movement and roster construction rather than live game lines.
The Calgary Flames last won the Stanley Cup in 1989, defeating the Montreal Canadiens for the only championship in franchise history. The franchise began as the Atlanta Flames in 1972 and relocated to Calgary in 1980. They returned to the Final in 2004 but lost to Tampa Bay in seven games.
The biggest durable factor is roster construction and the franchise's retool timeline. After a 34-39-9, 77-point finish in 2025-26 that left them 14th in the Western Conference, Calgary trades as an offseason-personnel story, where cap space, contract status, and player-movement decisions drive the price more than any single game result.