Tokyo Brandon stands as one of WagerTalk's most elite and consistent performers — the #1 all-sports profit leader in 3 of the last 5 years among 33 top handicappers. His rock-solid, year-over-year track record proves he's no flash in the pan:
2025: #4 All-Sports Profit (+49 units)
2024: #1 All-Sports Profit (+180 units)
2022: #1 All-Sports Profit (+125 units)
2021: #1 All-Sports Profit (+225 units)
Lock in Tokyo Brandon's Rhode Island at George Washington college hoops pick TODAY for ONLY $7 and ride with the guy who's been crushing it for years. This is primed for value — proven dominance meets a steal of a deal with serious upside. Get it before it's gone!
Follow
X @Tokyo Brandon
TikTok @tokyobrandonofficial
Instagram @tokyobrandon
Member Notes
Today’s Free Picks
| Sport | Game Selection | Game Time |
|---|---|---|
| CBB | (607) BYU at (608) Baylor: Spread | 7:00pm EST - Feb 10/2026 |
The PLAY: Baylor +3.5 (-118)
ALL-BASEBALL ALL-ACCESS YEAR PASS | EVERY LEAGUE! $699 DISCOUNT
This is an early bird special offered only for a limited time
50% OFF Every Baseball League from WagerTalk's Top Capper!
🔴click here! ➡ https://www.wagertalk.com/profile/tokyo-brandon#specials
Tokyo Brandon has been dominating since 2020. Don’t miss your shot to cash in with Tokyo Brandon’s baseball in 2026 at 50% for the entire year, every league!
Why trust Tokyo Brandon? Because the record speaks for itself:
#1 MLB profit 2024 (+145 units)
#1 All-Sports Profit 2024 (+180u)
#1 All-Sports Profit 2022 (+125u)
#1 All-Sports Profit 2021 (+225u)
#4 All-Sports Profit 2025 (+49u)
Tokyo Brandon has finished #1 overall in profit at WagerTalk among 33 cappers over the last 5 years and turned a profit in 5 of the last 6 seasons – no guessing here, just a consistent winning strategy and results. Your bankroll will thank you later, and your wallet will too with 50% off! (this includes MLB, KBO, Japanese, World Baseball Classic, Mexican baseball and EVERY other baseball bet all year)
🔴click here! ➡ https://www.wagertalk.com/profile/tokyo-brandon#specials
Follow
X @Tokyo Brandon
TikTok @tokyobrandonofficial
Instagram @tokyobrandon
_________
Stat Comparison (Since Jan 1, 2026)
(Where available from recent official box/season stats)
Category | BYU Cougars | Baylor Bears |
|---|---|---|
Points Per Game | 86.7 | 84.1 |
Points Allowed Per Game | 73.0 | 75.0 |
Top 2 Scorers (Season Averages) | AJ Dybantsa ~25.3 ppg, | Cameron Carr ~19.6 ppg, |
Assist Leaders | Egor Demin ~3.1–5.2 apg (over last 10/season) | Obi Agbim ~5.2 apg |
Top 2 Rebound Leaders | Richie Saunders ~5.8 rpg (last 10) | Cameron Carr ~5.8 rpg (last 10) |
Injuries / Availability | No major injuries reported at time of search (~no news alerts) | No major injuries reported |
Season Trends (Since 1/1/26)
Category | BYU | Baylor |
|---|---|---|
Last 10 SU | Mixed results with 4-6 in last 10 | Also mixed 5-5 in last 10 |
ATS (last 10) | Slightly volatile, lack of dominant trend | Also middling ATS performance |
O/U Results | 6/10 Overs (points > listed totals) | 5/10 Overs |
Home/Away Splits | Very strong at home; unbeaten at home in many recent seasons | Baylor middling at home (9-4) |
Losing/Winning Margins | Recent losses include double-digit deficits vs top teams | Win/loss margins fluctuate; blowout wins & close losses |
Player Matchup Notes
BYU’s AJ Dybantsa is the central offensive engine, averaging 25+ ppg over recent games, and BYU’s offense runs through him and Richie Saunders — both capable of creating consistent scoring. Their assist rate helps keep possessions high and efficient. Baylor’s top scorers like Cameron Carr and Tounde Yessoufou provide a balanced scoring attack, but Baylor’s defensive lapses have allowed high opponent scoring.
In rebounding, both teams pull similar numbers, but BYU’s recent defensive boards have halted second-chance opportunities while Baylor has had variable rebounding success. Assist/leaders indicate BYU can generate quality shots, while Baylor’s assist numbers show good ball movement — meaning this likely won’t be a low-possession grind. Both teams have faced top competition (BYU four straight losses to ranked teams and Baylor losses/near losses), so level-of-competition suggests adjustments on both sides will matter — particularly late game execution and turnovers.
Why I like it:
BYU is on a 4-game skid (and the recent scores have swung wildly).
Baylor’s last 10 are much more “Big 12 rock fight”: I totaled Baylor’s last 10 from their schedule—70.9 scored / 75.4 allowed (avg total 146.3).
BYU last 10 (from their schedule) come out around 83.7 scored / 81.7 allowed (avg total 165.4)—but their away defense in that stretch is the soft spot, and this is a road spot into a pace-controlling opponent.
