
Dallas Stars 2025-26 season recap, Western Conference run, and live offseason markets on roster moves tracked across prediction markets.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Avalanche | 55-16 | — |
Stars | 50-20 | 9 |
Wild| 46-24 |
| 17 |
Mammoth | 43-33 | 29 |
Blues | 37-33 | 35 |
Predators | 38-34 | 35 |
Jets | 35-35 | 39 |
Blackhawks | 29-39 | 49 |
The Dallas Stars are one of the most actively traded teams in NHL prediction markets, a function of a deep, contention-built roster that turned in another high-end regular season. Dallas finished 50-20-12 for 112 points, second in the Western Conference as of the end of the 2025-26 regular season, before the postseason run ended short of the Stanley Cup Final now being contested between Vegas and Carolina. With the season over, the live board has shifted from championship futures to offseason markets: player next-team contracts, re-signing odds, and front-office questions. The durable swing factors on those prices are roster construction and the Stars' cap situation around a core that has reached deep into the playoffs in consecutive years. The live odds for every active contract sit on the board above.
The Dallas Stars closed the 2025-26 regular season at 50-20-12, good for 112 points and the second seed in the Western Conference. That is a third straight 50-win-caliber campaign, and the markets treated Dallas as a championship-tier team for most of the year. The postseason ended before the Stanley Cup Final, which is now a Vegas-Carolina series with no champion yet decided as of June 4, 2026. The Stars do not appear in that series. For prediction-market purposes, the takeaway is structural: Dallas remains a top-of-conference roster whose ceiling traders consistently priced near the contender tier, but whose championship conversion has lagged the regular-season form for a third consecutive spring.
The Western Conference race is one of the league's deepest, and Dallas sat near the top of it all season. The Stars share the Central Division with Colorado, Winnipeg, and a hardening Utah franchise, a grouping that perennially produces multiple 100-point teams. The durable read is that the board prices Dallas on roster strength, which kept their conference and Cup futures rich even as playoff results disappointed. That gap between regular-season pricing and postseason delivery is the defining tension on Stars markets and the reason traders watch their offseason moves so closely heading into 2026-27.
With the championship board now stale and contaminated by junk and series-prop quotes, the live volume on Stars markets has moved to the offseason. The most prominent active contract tied to Dallas is the player next-team market covering where free agents and trade candidates land, including Auston Matthews's next team, where Dallas registers as one of the destination candidates against the field. These markets durably move on cap space, roster fit, and front-office direction rather than on any single game result. Forward catalysts include the June draft, the July 1 free-agency window, and any coaching or general-manager decisions that reshape the core. Point to the live board above for where each contract sits today.
The Dallas Stars have won one Stanley Cup, in 1999, the franchise's lone title since relocating from Minnesota in 1993, where it played as the Minnesota North Stars from its 1967 founding. That single championship, set against a recent run of deep playoff appearances, frames how the market weights this roster: a built-to-contend team carrying real Cup equity but also a multi-year history of falling short of the Final. That history is exactly why offseason roster markets draw attention. Traders are pricing whether the next set of moves finally converts regular-season strength into a second title.
As of June 4, 2026, the most active Stars-adjacent offseason contract is Auston Matthews's next team, where the field favorite (stays with Toronto or retires) trades around 14c, with Dallas listed among the destination candidates. There is no clean live next-season Stanley Cup contract for Dallas yet; check the live board above for current prices.
Dallas markets trade across the prediction-market platforms tracked by Prediction Genius, with offseason next-team and roster contracts typically carrying a deeper book on one venue and tighter spreads on another. Prices are aggregated so you can compare the same market side by side rather than checking each platform.
Coverage spans Stanley Cup and Western Conference futures during the season, plus offseason markets including player next-team contracts, re-signing odds, and front-office questions. With the 2025-26 season over, the active board is weighted toward offseason roster markets rather than live game odds.
The Dallas Stars last won the Stanley Cup in 1999, their only title. The franchise was founded in 1967 as the Minnesota North Stars and relocated to Dallas in 1993, so all of its championship history runs through that single 1999 win.
Roster construction and cap situation are the biggest durable drivers. Dallas has posted three straight strong regular seasons, finishing 50-20-12 for 112 points in 2025-26, yet has not reached the Stanley Cup Final, so offseason moves around its contending core carry outsized weight on the board.