| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before 2031 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether a Canadian NHL franchise will win the Stanley Cup at any point prior to the 2031 season. It matters because Canadian teams, their fans, and bettors closely track franchise trajectories and league-wide competitiveness over multi-year horizons.
Canadian clubs are a core part of the NHL but have gone decades without lifting the Cup, making any run to a championship a major national story. Team performance depends on long-term roster building, salary-cap management, goalie play, and unpredictable playoff variance; franchise fortunes can change rapidly with trades, drafts, and coaching moves.
Market prices reflect the aggregated, real-time expectations of participants based on current information and will move as news (trades, injuries, standings) arrives. Use prices as a live signal of shifting beliefs rather than a fixed prediction; always check the market's official resolution rules for edge cases.
It means the market will consider whether any Canadian NHL franchise has won the Stanley Cup prior to the official start of the 2031 season; the final determination follows the exchange's posted resolution criteria and the NHL calendar, so consult the market page for the definitive cutoff definition.
Current Canadian NHL franchises include the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, Winnipeg Jets, Edmonton Oilers, Calgary Flames, and Vancouver Canucks; the market follows the league's official franchise status at the time of any Cup win.
Resolution depends on the team's official country of domicile at the moment it wins the Stanley Cup; if a franchise has become a Canadian-based team by the time of the championship, it would be treated as a Canadian winner per the market's rules.
Extraordinary events are handled according to the exchange's resolution policies; if no Cup is awarded before the stated cutoff, the market will resolve in line with the platform's rules for cancelled or incomplete seasons—check the market's terms for specific contingencies.
Significant driver events include major trades or free-agent acquisitions that alter contenders' depth, breakout seasons from top prospects, long-term injury news to key players (especially goaltenders), and playoff-series outcomes that change the near-term championship picture.