
Track Nashville Predators offseason odds, player next-team markets, and 2026-27 Stanley Cup futures as they open across the prediction markets tracked by Prediction Genius.
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 Nashville Predators are a steadily traded NHL franchise on prediction markets, valued less for star-driven championship volume than for a defense-first identity and a front office that has historically punched above its market size. Their 2025-26 season is over: the Predators finished 38-34-10 for 86 points and landed tenth in the Western Conference, on the outside of the playoff field. With the team eliminated, attention on the board has shifted from in-season futures to the offseason cycle, where player next-team markets and forward-looking roster questions carry what little Nashville-specific action exists. The live board above shows every open contract; the analysis below covers what those markets mean and what durably drives Predators pricing heading into the summer.
With the regular season closed and the Predators absent from the playoff bracket, as of June 4, 2026 there is no clean, live next-season Stanley Cup contract for Nashville that is worth quoting. The 2025-26 Stanley Cup Champion field still showing on some platforms is contaminated with settled and series-specific props (already-settled outcomes, conference-series lines) rather than a tradeable Predators title price, so traders should read it with caution. The honest read is that Nashville's most active offseason market right now is a player next-team contract, not a championship future. As clean 2026-27 Cup and division markets open over the summer, the board above will carry them first. Until then, the Predators sit in the longshot tier any time a forward-looking title market does appear, a direct function of a roster that finished below the playoff line.
Nashville competes in the Central Division of the Western Conference, a grouping that runs deep and physical and rarely hands out easy points. As of June 4, 2026, the Predators finished tenth in the conference at 38-34-10, missing the postseason on a goal differential that sat slightly underwater (247 goals for, 269 against). The durable read on Nashville is that the market prices the franchise on roster strength and goaltending rather than on flashy offense, and the gap this season was scoring depth, not effort. The 2026-27 division race will hinge on how the front office addresses that finishing problem over the offseason, which is exactly what the next-team and re-signing markets are beginning to probe.
Nashville is a mid-market franchise, so its prediction market volume runs thinner than the league's marquee names, and most Predators-specific action concentrates in the offseason rather than the dog days of the schedule. The durable swing factors on any Nashville price are goaltending stability, the health of the blue line, and whether the front office adds top-six scoring. The forward catalysts now are roster catalysts: the draft, free agency opening, and the next-team decisions of available players around the league that the board tracks as offseason markets. The live board above shows where each of those contracts sits today.
The most prominent live Nashville-adjacent offseason contract on the board is a player next-team market, the kind of question that drives summer volume across the NHL once the on-ice schedule ends. These markets price where high-profile players land and whether they stay put, re-sign, or move, and they resolve on confirmed signings or trades rather than on game results. For Nashville, the structural reason these matter is roster construction: a defense-first team that missed the playoffs has clear needs, and player movement is the lever the market watches most closely. Point to the live board for the current price on each next-team contract.
The Nashville Predators have never won the Stanley Cup, with a championship count of zero since the franchise's founding in 1998. Their high-water mark remains the 2017 run to the Stanley Cup Final, where Nashville reached the championship series for the only time in franchise history before falling in six games. That run still shapes how the market frames the team as a franchise capable of postseason depth when its goaltending and defense align, even if the roster has not returned to that tier. A tenth-place finish in 2025-26 reinforces the longshot framing any title market applies to Nashville heading into 2026-27.
As of June 4, 2026, there is no clean live Stanley Cup future for the Nashville Predators. The Predators missed the playoffs, and the 2025-26 champion field on the board is contaminated with settled and series props. The most active Nashville-adjacent offseason market is a player next-team contract, its favorite priced at 14c. Check the live board.
Nashville's markets trade across the major prediction market platforms Prediction Genius tracks, though as a mid-market NHL team the books are thinner than for marquee franchises. Offseason player-movement contracts typically carry the most Nashville-specific action. The live board above shows which platforms have an open market and where the price sits.
Prediction Genius covers Nashville's Stanley Cup and Western Conference futures when they are open, plus offseason markets including player next-team contracts, potential GM and coaching markets, and re-signing questions. In-season, the coverage extends to division and game-level markets. Offseason coverage concentrates on roster-movement contracts.
The Nashville Predators have never won the Stanley Cup. The franchise, founded in 1998, reached the Stanley Cup Final once, in 2017, where it lost in six games. That remains the deepest postseason run in Predators history.
Roster construction and goaltending are the durable drivers of Nashville's price. As a defense-first, mid-market franchise that finished 38-34-10 and missed the 2026 playoffs, the Predators' pricing turns on offseason additions to a roster that lacked scoring depth, which is why player-movement markets dominate the current board.