Most cappers sell a streak. Tokyo Brandon sells a track record.
Among WagerTalk’s 33 handicappers, Tokyo Brandon has finished #1 in all-sports profit 3 of the last 5 years — the kind of consistency that doesn’t come from “vibes” or one lucky month.
Year-by-year receipts:
2024: #1 MLB Profit (+145 units)
2024: #1 All-Sports Profit (+180 units)
2022: #1 All-Sports Profit (+125 units)
2021: #1 All-Sports Profit (+225 units)
2025: #4 All-Sports Profit (+49 units)
Grab Tokyo Brandon’s DraftKings Chinese basketball pick for $7 and ride with the guy who’s been cashing tickets across multiple seasons, not just one good week.
Member Notes
Today’s Free Picks
| Sport | Game Selection | Game Time |
|---|---|---|
| MLB | (987) New York Yankees at (988) San Francisco Giants: Moneyline | 8:05pm EDT - Mar 25/2026 |
The PLAY: New York Yankees -120
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 in 3 of 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
_______
Offense baseline
Yankees: 5.24 R/G
Giants: 4.35 R/G
League run environment proxy: AL 4.27, NL 4.51
Offense index (approx):
NYY: 1.194
SFG: 0.991
Starters
Max Fried (NYY, LHP)
2025: 2.86 ERA; Away 3.28, Night 2.90
2024 vs SF: 5.1 IP, 3 ER, 3 BB, 5 K
Logan Webb (SFG, RHP)
2025 home/away: Home 3.10 ERA, Away 3.36 ERA
2025 day/night: Night 3.36 ERA
batter-vs-pitcher H2H (since 2024)
Fried vs Giants: 3 ER / 5.1 IP (tiny sample)
Webb vs Yankees: 7 ER / 12.0 IP (tiny sample)
Projected lineups
Yankees: Grisham, Judge, Bellinger, Rice, Stanton, Chisholm, McMahon, Caballero, Wells
Giants: Ramos, Devers, Adames, Chapman, Jung Hoo Lee, Bader, Eldridge, Schmitt, Bailey
1) Starter expected innings (March workload)
Because this is late March and both pitchers have March samples that are short:
Webb: 5.0 IP
Fried: 5.1 IP
2) Build “game-context” RA9 for each starter
Fried context RA9
Context base: average of Away (3.28) and Night (2.90) ⇒ 3.09
Small March bump = 3.24
H2H RA9 vs SF / Blend = 3.65
Webb context RA9
Context base: average of Home (3.10) and Night (3.36) ⇒ 3.23
Tiny March bump: = 3.29
H2H RA9 vs NYY / Blend = 3.68
3) Park/weather/travel adjustments
Travel penalty to NYY bats: I applied -3% to NYY run creation.
Weather/park: mild cool-evening suppression factor (0.97) typical of SF night baseball. (This is an assumption, not a sourced fact.)
4) Convert to runs (starter + bullpen)
Bullpens: because “last 30 days” for late-March isn’t reliably anchorable today, generic bullpen strength assumptions (as the season progresses this will be clearer)
Projection results
Full game projected score
NYY 4.0 — SFG 3.2
Projected total: 7.2
1st 5 innings projected score
NYY 2.2 — SFG 1.8
1st5 projected total: 4.0
Starting pitcher boxscore
Pitcher | IP | ER | H | K | BB |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Max Fried (NYY) | 5.1 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 2 |
Logan Webb (SFG) | 5.0 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 1 |
Hitter boxscore projection
NYY hitters
Hitter | AB | BB | H | 2B | 3B | HR | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Trent Grisham | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Aaron Judge | 4 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Cody Bellinger | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Ben Rice | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Giancarlo Stanton | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Jazz Chisholm Jr. | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Ryan McMahon | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
José Caballero | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Austin Wells | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
SFG hitters
Hitter | AB | BB | H | 2B | 3B | HR | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heliot Ramos | 4 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Rafael Devers | 4 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Willy Adames | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Matt Chapman | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Jung Hoo Lee | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Harrison Bader | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Bryce Eldridge | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Casey Schmitt | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Patrick Bailey | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Wager & Probability Analysis
Moneyline value vs book
Team | Model win% | Fair ML | Book ML | Book implied% | Edge (Model–Book) | Value? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NYY | 62.1% | -164 | -115 | 53.5% | +8.6% | +VALUE |
SFG | 37.9% | +164 | +105 | 48.8% | -10.9% | -VALUE |
Totals value (Full game O/U 7)
Model total = 7.2 → very close to 7 (and 7 is a push number).
Market | Model proj | Model win% | Fair odds | Book odds | Edge | Value? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Over 7 (8+ wins, 7 push) | 7.2 | 51.1% (no-push) | -105 | -110 | -1.2% | -VALUE |
Under 7 (0–6 wins, 7 push) | 7.2 | 48.9% (no-push) | +105 | -110 | -3.5% | -VALUE |
Totals value (1st 5 innings)
I don’t have a posted DK 1st5 line this far out, so I’m using the common pairing 1st5 O/U 3.5 (-110/-110) purely for comparison.
Market | Model proj (1st5) | Model win% | Fair odds | Assumed book | Edge | Value? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st5 Over 3.5 | 4.0 | 56.5% | -130 | -110 | +4.1% | +VALUE |
1st5 Under 3.5 | 4.0 | 43.5% | +130 | -110 | -8.9% | -VALUE |
Pros for Yankees -120
Price vs my fair line: -120 implies about 54.5% win probability. My model has NYY around 62% (fair about -164), so the number is cheap relative to the projection.
Offensive ceiling edge: Even in a low-total environment, the Yankees’ lineup projects to create more “multi-run” innings (one big swing + traffic) than SF, which matters when totals are ~7 and every run is precious.
Starter matchup isn’t a disadvantage: Webb is excellent at home, but Fried’s away/night profile + H2H slice doesn’t scream “avoid.” My projection has both starters around ~2 ER through ~5 innings, so the bet isn’t leaning on one pitcher melting down.
Late-game leverage: In tight, low-scoring games, the better bullpen/high-K arms and pinch-hit depth tend to matter more. I generally rate NYY’s late-inning options as the side more likely to convert a 1-run edge into a win.
7 total = fewer “randomness runs”: Lower totals reduce the chance a weaker team wins via 9–7 chaos; games become more about pitching, defense, and a couple high-leverage ABs—areas that typically favor the higher-talent roster.
| Sport | Game Selection | Game Time |
|---|---|---|
| MLB | (921) Cincinnati Reds at (922) Seattle Mariners: Moneyline | 4:10pm EDT - Mar 15/2026 |
The PLAY: Cincinnati Reds 100
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 in 3 of 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
X @Tokyo Brandon
_______
Probable starters are Brandon Williamson (CIN) and George Kirby (SEA) for Sunday, March 15, 2026 at Peoria Stadium.
Cincinnati has been the much stronger spring club so far. The Reds enter this game 12-9, 4-6 away, with 134 runs scored and 135 allowed. Seattle is 5-16-1, 3-9 at home, with 108 scored and 165 allowed. On a per-game basis, that is:
Using a neutral matchup average from those spring scoring rates:
CIN raw expected runs = (CIN offense 6.38 + SEA defense 7.50) / 2 = 6.94
SEA raw expected runs = (SEA offense 4.91 + CIN defense 6.43) / 2 = 5.67
For Cincinnati, I trimmed the raw number down from 6.94 to 6.3 because George Kirby is still the better established pitcher than the Mariners’ ugly overall spring RA would imply. Kirby’s 2025 MLB line was 10-8, 4.21 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and his current spring line is 4.1 IP, 6.23 ERA, 1.38 WHIP. That is not peak Kirby, but it is still a higher-quality starter baseline than most cactus-league innings. I also give Seattle a late-game boost from the stronger farm system, which keeps Cincinnati from running away with the full-game projection.
For Seattle, I shaved the raw number from 5.67 to 5.5. Williamson’s spring line is stronger than Kirby’s right now: 7.0 IP, 2.57 ERA, 0.71 WHIP. His broader MLB résumé is much thinner, and his surfaced line is only a 2024 sample, but it was respectable at 3.77 ERA, 1.05 WHIP. Because it is spring training, I do not project him deep; his current 7.0 spring innings suggest something like 2.5-3.0 innings here, while Kirby’s 4.1 spring innings suggest more like 2.0-2.5 innings. That gives Cincinnati a small first-five edge from starter readiness alone. The reason Seattle still gets to 5.5 is that Peoria weather is warm and dry, and the Mariners’ farm system is much stronger than Cincinnati’s entering 2026, which matters a lot once the regulars start evaporating and the game turns into prospect soup.
The prospect-depth gap is real. Seattle’s preseason MLB Pipeline list is headlined by Colt Emerson (MLB No. 9), Kade Anderson (No. 21), Ryan Sloan (No. 33), Lazaro Montes (No. 43), and Michael Arroyo (No. 67). Cincinnati’s top end is good but lighter: Sal Stewart (No. 22), Alfredo Duno (No. 38), Steele Hall (No. 83), and Rhett Lowder (No. 86). That is one of the main reasons I keep the Mariners competitive in the full-game projection even though their spring record and run differential are ugly.
Market comparison
Market | Team | Market proxy | Projected win % | Fair odds | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full game | CIN | 48% / about +108 | 56.2% | -128 | CIN value |
Full game | SEA | 53% / about -113 | 43.8% | +128 | SEA overpriced |
1st 5 | CIN | n/a | 60.4% | -153 | playable at -153 or better |
1st 5 | SEA | n/a | 39.6% | +153 | playable only at +153 or better |
Bottom line
Reds 6.3-5.5 full game. Cincinnati gets the edge from the much better spring scoring profile, Seattle’s ugly run-prevention to this point, and Williamson looking a little more stretched out than Kirby right now. Seattle’s rescue rope is its stronger prospect system, which is why I stop well short of making this some monster Reds price. If the real book is still near a coin flip, Cincinnati is the value side.
