
Winnipeg Jets season recap, offseason roster markets, and Stanley Cup futures 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 Winnipeg Jets are a regularly traded NHL franchise on prediction markets, a small-market club whose price swings on roster construction and goaltending more than on payroll. The 2025-26 season is over: Winnipeg finished 35-35-12 for 82 points as of June 4, 2026, landing 12th in the Western Conference and missing the playoffs entirely. With no postseason run to price, the live board has shifted from championship futures to offseason markets, where the durable swing factors are which core pieces re-sign and which arrive in trades. The Stanley Cup Final is still live elsewhere, but the Jets' season ended in April. The live offseason board sits above; the analysis below covers what those markets mean.
The Winnipeg Jets closed the 2025-26 regular season at 35-35-12, good for 82 points and a 12th-place finish in the Western Conference as of June 4, 2026. That record left them outside the playoff field, a sharp regression for a franchise that had been trading in the contender tier in prior seasons. The structural read from the market is straightforward: a club that scored 231 goals while conceding 260 finished with a negative goal differential, and prediction markets priced the slide accordingly as the season wore on. The Jets' identity remains built around defensive structure and goaltending, and when that formula slipped, so did their standing. With 82 games played and the season complete, the championship futures are settled history for Winnipeg; the live action has moved to the offseason.
With the season over, the most actively traded Winnipeg-relevant contracts are offseason roster markets rather than Stanley Cup futures. Player next-team markets dominate the board, including an Auston Matthews next-team contract that traders watch closely as the league's free-agency and trade picture takes shape. These markets resolve on where a player signs or is dealt, and the durable driver is roster fit and cap space rather than any single result. The Jets enter the offseason with questions about re-signing their own core and whether they pursue upgrades to climb back into the Western Conference race. The board above carries the current offseason contracts; the exact prices move as news breaks through the summer.
Winnipeg's prediction market volume is driven less by market size than by uncertainty. As a small-market franchise without a top-tier payroll, the Jets are priced on roster construction, goaltending reliability, and whether their defensive system holds. The durable swing factors heading into the offseason are re-signings, the next-coach and next-GM picture if the front office reshapes, and any incoming trade targets. Forward catalysts include the NHL Draft, the opening of free agency, and training camp, each of which resets the team's projected outlook. The live board reflects where the price sits today; the structural story is a club deciding whether to retool or reload after a year out of the playoffs.
The current Winnipeg Jets franchise has never won the Stanley Cup. This iteration of the Jets was founded in 2011 when the Atlanta Thrashers relocated to Winnipeg, and the franchise carries a championship_count of zero. The original Winnipeg Jets (a separate franchise that relocated to become the Arizona Coyotes) also never won a Cup. That history shapes how the market weights Winnipeg: this is a franchise still chasing its first title, priced as a build-toward-contention club rather than an established power. The 2025-26 playoff miss reinforces that read, and the offseason markets above are where traders now express their view on whether the next roster gets the Jets back into the conversation.
As of June 4, 2026, the Winnipeg Jets have no live Stanley Cup contract; their 2025-26 season ended with a 12th-place Western Conference finish and a playoff miss. The most active Winnipeg-relevant market is an Auston Matthews next-team contract. Check the live board above for current offseason prices.
Winnipeg's offseason and roster markets trade across the major prediction-market platforms covered by Prediction Genius, with depth varying by contract. Player next-team markets typically carry thinner books than headline championship futures. The live board above shows where each contract trades today.
Prediction Genius covers Winnipeg Jets Stanley Cup and conference futures during the season, plus offseason markets including player next-team contracts, re-signings, and front-office moves. With the 2025-26 season over, the offseason roster markets are the active set.
The current Winnipeg Jets franchise has never won the Stanley Cup. The team was founded in 2011 after the Atlanta Thrashers relocated to Winnipeg and holds a championship count of zero. The original Jets franchise, now the Arizona Coyotes, also never won.
Roster construction and goaltending are the biggest durable drivers. As a small-market club without a top payroll, Winnipeg is priced on system reliability and personnel rather than spending. The 2025-26 miss at 35-35-12 made offseason re-signings and trades the key price swing heading into next season.