
Season recap, offseason outlook, and live Philadelphia Flyers player-movement and futures markets tracked across prediction markets.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Hurricanes | 53-22 | — |
Penguins | 41-25 | 15 |
Flyers| 43-27 |
| 15 |
Capitals | 43-30 | 18 |
Blue Jackets | 40-30 | 21 |
Islanders | 43-34 | 22 |
Devils | 42-37 | 26 |
Rangers | 34-39 | 36 |
The Philadelphia Flyers are one of the Original Six-era cornerstone franchises that prediction markets track closely, a function of a large, hockey-obsessed market and two Stanley Cup banners. The 2025-26 season is over: the Flyers finished 43-27-12 for 98 points and the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference as of June 4, 2026, a return to the playoff picture after several lean years under the franchise's rebuild. With the season closed, the live board above no longer prices a Flyers championship run; instead it tracks the markets that durably move in the offseason, player next-team contracts, coaching and front-office questions, and re-signing odds. The durable driver on those markets is roster construction: how Philadelphia spends its cap space and develops its young core. The analysis below covers what those offseason markets mean and how they resolve.
The Philadelphia Flyers closed the 2025-26 regular season at 43-27-12, good for 98 points and the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference as of June 4, 2026. That record marks a clear step forward for a franchise that had missed the postseason in the back half of its rebuild, and the market read it as a competitive but not-yet-contending team. The Flyers play in the Metropolitan Division, one of the deepest groupings in hockey, which kept their regular-season futures priced as a fringe playoff side rather than a Stanley Cup threat. With the season concluded and the Stanley Cup Final between Vegas and Carolina still being decided, no Flyers postseason market remains live. The board has rolled forward to the offseason.
The forward-looking markets that touch Philadelphia now are player-movement and front-office contracts rather than a clean next-season championship future. Prediction markets in the NHL offseason cluster around three durable questions: where do unrestricted free agents sign, who runs the bench and the front office, and which core players get re-signed. For the Flyers, the structural swing factor is cap flexibility, the team carries meaningful space and a young core that shapes whether it buys, sells, or holds. The live board above tracks the specific player next-team markets in play; the exact contract names and prices move as free agency approaches, so reference the board for current pricing rather than any single quoted number here.
Philadelphia is a large hockey market with a passionate, durable fan base, which is the structural reason its markets carry volume even in a transition window. The franchise's narrative gravity, the Broad Street Bullies history, the long rebuild, and the recent playoff push, keeps casual and sharp money engaged. In the offseason the volume migrates from team futures to player-movement and management markets, where the durable drivers are cap space, the development curve of the young roster, and the front office's stated direction. Forward catalysts with real dates anchor these markets: the NHL Draft and the July 1 free-agency window are the two events that move offseason pricing most. The live board above reflects where each contract sits today.
The Philadelphia Flyers have won the Stanley Cup twice, in 1974 and 1975, the back-to-back titles of the Broad Street Bullies era that remain the franchise's defining championship history. Founded in 1967 as one of the NHL's first expansion teams, the Flyers reached the Stanley Cup Final several times in the decades since, most recently in 2010, but have not added a third banner. That 50-plus-year title drought is the durable fact that shapes how the market weights the current roster: prediction markets treat Philadelphia as a proud, well-supported franchise still building back toward contention, not as a default championship-tier club. The 2025-26 playoff return reset that trajectory upward.
The Flyers' 2025-26 season is over, so no live championship future exists. The most prominent forward-looking market touching Philadelphia is an NHL player next-team contract; as of June 4, 2026 its favorite outcome (a player staying put or retiring) trades around 14c, with the rest of the field on the live board above. Pricing shifts as free agency nears.
Flyers-related offseason markets trade on the major prediction-market platforms tracked by Prediction Genius, with the deeper book and tighter spreads typically on whichever platform lists the active player-movement contract. Prediction Genius aggregates available prices so traders can compare a single market across venues.
Coverage includes Flyers regular-season and playoff futures while live, plus offseason markets: player next-team contracts, coaching and general-manager questions, and re-signing odds. During the season the page tracks Stanley Cup, conference, and division markets; in the offseason it follows roster and front-office movement.
The Philadelphia Flyers last won the Stanley Cup in 1975, the second of back-to-back titles in 1974 and 1975 won by the Broad Street Bullies. Those remain the franchise's only two championships; the Flyers last reached the Final in 2010.
Roster construction is the durable driver. The Flyers finished 43-27-12 in 2025-26 with cap flexibility and a young core, so how Philadelphia spends in free agency and develops its prospects shapes both player-movement markets now and team futures next season.