
St. Louis Blues season recap, offseason roster markets, and 2026-27 Stanley Cup outlook tracked across the prediction markets covered 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 St. Louis Blues are a regularly traded NHL franchise on prediction markets, a Central Division club whose 2025-26 season ended outside the playoff field. The Blues finished 37-33-12 for 86 points through all 82 games as of June 4, 2026, landing as the ninth seed in the Western Conference and missing the postseason by a narrow margin. With the season over and no live Stanley Cup contract for St. Louis on the board, the franchise's active markets have shifted to the offseason, where player next-team contracts, re-signings, and coaching questions drive trading. The durable swing factor on this franchise's pricing is roster construction, particularly how the front office handles its core forwards and goaltending depth heading into 2026-27. The live board above carries every current offseason contract; the analysis below covers what those markets mean.
The St. Louis Blues closed the 2025-26 season at 37-33-12, good for 86 points and the ninth seed in the Western Conference as of June 4, 2026. That finish left them on the wrong side of the playoff cutoff, narrowly out of the wild-card picture in a deep Western field. A minus-27 goal differential (231 scored against 258 allowed) tells the structural story: a team that competed in stretches but lacked the two-way consistency to climb into a top-eight seed. For a franchise that reached the postseason the prior year, an 86-point campaign reads as a step back rather than a rebuild, and the prediction markets now price St. Louis as a fringe contender rather than a lock for next spring.
With no live Stanley Cup contract for the Blues on the board, the action has moved to offseason roster questions. The board currently surfaces player next-team markets, the kind that price where pending free agents and trade candidates land, and these are where St. Louis traders should look first. These contracts resolve on signing or trade announcements rather than game results, so they move on reporting and front-office activity, not box scores. The structural read is straightforward: a 9th-seed team with cap flexibility is a logical buyer or seller depending on direction, and the offseason board reflects that uncertainty. Check the live board above for every active next-team, re-signing, and front-office contract, since these markets turn over quickly through the summer.
Volume on St. Louis markets is driven by roster churn rather than a championship narrative. The Blues are a mid-market franchise without the perennial-favorite gravity of an Original Six contender, so trading concentrates on transactional markets: who stays, who moves, and how the front office retools after a missed playoff. The durable swing factors are goaltending stability and the depth of the forward core, the two areas that most often determine whether St. Louis is a buyer or seller. Forward catalysts to watch include the NHL Draft, the July free-agency window, and any in-season trades. For the current price on any specific contract, the live board above is the source.
The St. Louis Blues won their first and only Stanley Cup in 2019, a worst-to-first run that ended a championship drought dating to the franchise's founding in 1967. That title remains the defining moment in franchise history and the reference point traders use when weighing how high St. Louis can climb. The years since have been a mix of playoff appearances and near-misses, and the 2025-26 season's ninth-place finish places the club in a retool window rather than a contention one. For the market, that history matters: St. Louis is a franchise that has shown it can break through, but the board does not currently price it among the league's title tier.
As of June 4, 2026, there is no live 2026-27 Stanley Cup contract for the St. Louis Blues on the board. The Blues missed the 2025-26 playoffs as the ninth seed in the Western Conference, and their 2025-26 conference market has resolved. Check the live board above for any new season futures as they open.
St. Louis offseason markets trade across the platforms Prediction Genius aggregates, with depth varying by contract. Player next-team and front-office markets often have thinner books than championship futures, so spreads can be wider. Compare the live prices on the board above to spot the better number across platforms.
Coverage spans Stanley Cup and conference futures when they are live, plus offseason markets such as player next-team contracts, re-signings, and front-office questions. During the season, the board also tracks game-level and division markets. With the 2025-26 season complete, current coverage centers on offseason roster markets.
The St. Louis Blues won the Stanley Cup in 2019, the only championship in franchise history since their founding in 1967. That worst-to-first run remains the franchise's defining title and the historical anchor for how markets weigh the club's ceiling.
Roster construction is the biggest durable driver, specifically goaltending stability and the depth of the forward core. After an 86-point, ninth-seed 2025-26 finish, the front office's offseason direction determines whether St. Louis trades as a buyer or seller, and that read moves the offseason board more than any single result.