RJ Bell's Dream Preview

Pregame.com

Winning sports picks from Las Vegas. Everything you need for free on the biggest games each week from Pregame.com's Wiseguy Roundtable. Alongside your host RJ Bell, we have professional bettor Steve Fezzik, plus more of the biggest names from the world of sports betting.

  1. 5H AGO

    Cash That Ticket - Tuesday January 13th

    Munaf Manji talks betting for Tuesday Jan 13. The Houston Texans closed Super Wild Card Weekend with a dominant 30 to 6 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night, a game defined far more by defensive control than offensive rhythm. Houston’s defense scored twice in the fourth quarter, turning a competitive contest into a rout and pushing the Texans into the divisional round. The Steelers managed only two field goals, while their offense struggled to sustain drives or protect the football against relentless pressure. C J Stroud finished 21 of 32 for 250 yards with one touchdown, but the stat line masked a turbulent night that included multiple fumbles and an interception. Despite those mistakes, Houston’s defense consistently erased momentum and ultimately decided the outcome. Christian Kirk emerged as the offensive standout for the Texans, hauling in eight receptions for 144 yards and a 46 yard touchdown, providing the lone passing score of the game. On the ground, Woody Marks and Nick Chubb combined for 160 rushing yards, with Marks breaking through repeatedly as the Steelers’ defense failed to contain the run. Pittsburgh’s offense never found an answer, as Aaron Rodgers was held to 146 passing yards, sacked four times, and finished with a QBR of 14.3. A strip sack returned for a touchdown and a late pick six sealed the result, fueling speculation about whether this marked the final game of Rodgers’ career and raising broader questions about the Steelers’ direction moving forward. Houston now advances to face New England, with attention turning to the health of Nico Collins after he exited with a concussion. Around the NBA, the Utah Jazz earned a road win in Cleveland behind 32 points from Keyonte George, while the Pacers edged the Celtics at home and Philadelphia handled Toronto in a game highlighted by a late Kyle Lowry appearance. Sacramento outscored the Lakers 124 to 112 as Malik Monk delivered a sharp shooting performance, continuing Los Angeles’ defensive struggles. The Clippers also picked up a home victory over Charlotte with strong nights from Kawhi Leonard and James Harden. As the calendar moves deeper into January, both leagues showcased familiar themes, defense dictating postseason football outcomes and midseason NBA games exposing teams still searching for consistency. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    41 min
  2. 1D AGO

    Cash That Ticket - Monday January 12th

    Munaf Manji and Griffin Warner talk NFL playoff action. Super Wild Card Weekend delivered a slate defined by narrow margins, late execution, and familiar postseason themes, as several contenders advanced while others were undone by experience gaps, turnovers, and situational football. The weekend opened with the Rams surviving a scare in Carolina, where an aggressive Panthers approach nearly paid off. Early decisions put Los Angeles in short fields, and despite multiple swings in momentum, Matthew Stafford authored the decisive drive late to secure a 34 to 31 win. Carolina earned credit for its resilience, highlighted by defensive stops and a blocked punt, but two turnovers and the Rams’ composure in the final minutes proved decisive. The takeaway centered on coaching and quarterback experience, with Stafford and Sean McVay delivering when the game demanded it. Saturday night featured a divisional classic as Chicago stunned Green Bay 31 to 27 with a furious fourth quarter comeback. The Bears outscored the Packers 25 to 6 in the final period, overcoming clean offensive numbers from Green Bay that typically translate to wins. Missed kicks and late execution failures swung the result, while Chicago again showed comfort playing from behind, a trait that carried over from the regular season. Caleb Williams produced explosive yardage despite interceptions, and the Bears’ confidence in late game moments continued to grow, while questions lingered around Green Bay’s direction after another playoff disappointment. Sunday afternoon opened with Buffalo edging Jacksonville 27 to 24 in a game that followed a familiar Bills script. Josh Allen accounted for critical scores both through the air and on the ground, while Jacksonville’s statistical advantages were erased by late turnovers. The Jaguars moved the ball effectively and competed throughout, but one interception too many ended their season. Buffalo advanced with another reminder that its margin for error remains tied closely to Allen’s ability to elevate in decisive moments. In Philadelphia, San Francisco delivered the weekend’s most jarring result, eliminating the defending champions with a 23 to 19 road victory. The 49ers’ defense controlled critical downs, and Kyle Shanahan consistently stayed a step ahead as the Eagles leaned heavily on the run while leaving elite receivers underutilized. Despite winning time of possession and rushing efficiently, Philadelphia failed to capitalize, while San Francisco executed timely plays on both sides of the ball. The loss marked the end of the Eagles’ title defense and reinforced how quickly postseason expectations can unravel. Sunday night brought a defensive struggle in New England, where the Patriots handled the Chargers 16 to 3. The game never found an offensive rhythm, but New England’s defense dominated situationally, limiting third downs and red zone opportunities. The Patriots won without their best offensive performance, leaning on discipline, field position, and control, a formula that carried them comfortably into the divisional round. The weekend concluded with attention shifting to Monday night, where Houston travels to Pittsburgh in a matchup shaped by defense, pressure, and patience. The Texans arrive riding momentum behind a relentless pass rush, while the Steelers rely on experience, home field, and a history of thriving in prime time. With both offenses facing questions and both defenses capable of dictating tempo, the final game of the round promises another tight contest, consistent with a weekend that repeatedly came down to execution in the final moments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    59 min
  3. 4D AGO

    Cash Them Tickets - Friday January 9th

    Munaf Manji and SleepyJ talk NFL playoffs. Cash That Ticket returned ahead of NFL Super Wild Card Weekend with a wide ranging discussion that blended betting markets, coaching news, and matchup specific analysis across the entire playoff slate. The conversation opened with reaction to Miami moving on from head coach Mike McDaniel, a decision framed less as a tactical reset and more as an acknowledgment that the Dolphins quarterback situation has capped the team’s ceiling. Despite late season wins that briefly stabilized perceptions, the view was that turnover issues, durability concerns, and performance splits against winning teams ultimately forced ownership’s hand, even as McDaniel’s offensive reputation remained intact. Attention then shifted fully to the games, starting with the Rams traveling to Carolina. The Panthers were positioned as a live underdog playing with house money after an uneven season, while skepticism surrounded Los Angeles laying double digits in a playoff environment, particularly with concerns about receiver health and recent defensive vulnerabilities. That analysis led naturally into a focus on rushing matchups, with both sides highlighting how ground heavy game scripts could dictate tempo and suppress scoring. The Packers Bears matchup followed, framed as a referendum on quarterback trust. Chicago’s ability to generate turnovers and Green Bay’s uncertainty behind a concussed Jordan Love drove leanings toward the Bears and the under, with the game described as likely tight, physical, and possession driven. In Jacksonville, the Bills Jaguars contest was cast as strength against strength, elite pass defense versus elite rush defense, creating a case for a lower scoring outcome and elevated rushing usage from quarterbacks and featured backs. Trevor Lawrence’s late season form and Jacksonville’s defensive profile were emphasized, while Josh Allen’s playoff history as a runner shaped prop discussion. The afternoon spotlight game between San Francisco and Philadelphia centered on defensive attrition for the 49ers and the likelihood that mismatches over the middle could decide drives, particularly through tight end usage. Rather than a firm side, the emphasis landed on scoring potential and situational targets. Sunday night closed with Chargers Patriots, a game many viewed as deceptively dangerous for Los Angeles given travel, weather, and turnover trends, while New England’s balance and home field intensity were positioned as decisive factors. The preview wrapped with a look ahead to Houston hosting Pittsburgh, where momentum, trench play, and explosive receiving upside defined expectations. Across the board, the discussion reflected a consistent theme, playoff football compresses margins, exposes quarterback decision making, and rewards teams that can control games on the ground while capitalizing on situational mismatches rather than public narratives. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    52 min
  4. 4D AGO

    Dream Podcast - NFL Wild-Card Preview !!

    RJ Bell, Steve Fezzik and Mackenzie Rivers talk NFL Wild-Card betting. RJ Bell opened the discussion by outlining a limited promotional offer tied to the weekend, noting that a DREAM30 coupon provided thirty dollars toward picks with no credit card required and could be used on higher tier packages by paying the difference. He emphasized recent form across the board, highlighting strong short term performance from AJ Hoffman, Steve Fezzik, and Goodfella, before shifting into Super Wild Card Weekend analysis alongside Fezzik and Mackenzie Rivers. The conversation quickly centered on situational football and betting nuance rather than victory laps, with Bell framing playoff outcomes as heavily shaped by randomness, coaching decisions, and context rather than simple narratives. The group dissected Pittsburgh’s recent win through the lens of field position, late game decision making, and the thin margins that can swing public perception of coaches, reinforcing the idea that playoff football amplifies variance rather than eliminating it. Fezzik detailed his contest results to underline that even elite long term performance includes extended cold streaks, arguing that bettors misinterpret variance as failure and ignore how binomial outcomes naturally produce extreme runs. Bell supported that view with broader commentary on how fans and online critics misread short term results, stressing that documented records and large sample sizes matter far more than recent noise. As the focus turned to Wild Card matchups, strength of schedule emerged as a central theme, with Fezzik explaining that teams battle tested against stronger opposition tend to outperform expectations in the opening playoff round. Carolina versus the Rams served as a prime example, with Bell noting the historical success of large home underdogs in the playoffs and arguing that Carolina’s recent slate of strong opponents suggested resilience despite being heavily priced. The panel debated weather, rest, and rematch dynamics, ultimately leaning toward Carolina as undervalued while acknowledging the Rams’ top end power. In Packers Bears, Green Bay’s tougher schedule and historical dominance were weighed against Chicago’s home environment and recent competitiveness, while Fezzik identified a tight end reception prop as mispriced due to shifting usage and injuries. Buffalo at Jacksonville drew sharper disagreement, with Fezzik pointing to kicking props and Buffalo’s uncertainty at kicker, while Bell framed Jacksonville as underrated based on first half efficiency, recent form, and balanced improvement on both sides of the ball. Across games, the discussion consistently returned to early down performance, situational edges, and market bias, reinforcing the idea that playoff betting rewards structural analysis over headline driven reactions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    2h 1m
  5. 5D AGO

    Cash Them Tickets - Thursday January 8th

    Munaf Manji talks sports betting for Thursday January 8th Munaf Manji opened a new daily sports betting show with a clear focus on NBA and NFL coverage, positioning it as a concise and consistent destination for bettors looking to stay informed. He framed the program as a 25 to 30 minute listen designed for everyday routines while emphasizing audience interaction and future guest appearances. The episode centered first on major NBA developments, led by the season’s first blockbuster trade, with Trae Young moving from Atlanta to Washington in exchange for CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert. The absence of draft capital made the deal notable, as did Young’s preference for a Wizards team still deep in a rebuild and struggling defensively. Manji noted that Atlanta’s earlier decision not to extend Young signaled an inevitable breakup, while Washington viewed the acquisition as a foundational move around a four time All Star still in his prime. From Atlanta’s perspective, the trade created financial flexibility and opened the door for further roster changes, with Anthony Davis mentioned as a potential future target as the Hawks attempt to reset around emerging talent like Jalen Johnson. Manji also recapped a busy NBA slate, highlighting Orlando’s overtime win over Brooklyn powered by Paolo Banchero, Oklahoma City’s overtime victory against Utah behind a dominant performance from Shai Gilgeous Alexander, and San Antonio’s win over the Lakers amid growing concerns about Los Angeles depth and health. Looking ahead to Thursday’s limited schedule, Manji broke down several matchups through a betting lens, backing Charlotte against Indiana based on the Hornets defensive improvement and strong performance in back to back situations, leaning toward Cleveland as a road underdog in Minnesota, and favoring a high scoring game between Dallas and Utah given recent defensive trends and pace. The discussion then shifted briefly to the NFL, where Manji addressed the firing of John Harbaugh in Baltimore following a disappointing season. He framed Harbaugh as a coach likely to land quickly elsewhere, with the Giants emerging as a possible fit, while questioning how the Ravens will recalibrate around Lamar Jackson and a talented but underachieving roster. The episode closed with playoff previews and a best bet selection, reinforcing the show’s goal of blending news, analysis, and actionable wagering insight into a streamlined daily format aimed at serious sports bettors. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    42 min
  6. JAN 3

    CBB Sat/Sun Preview + Best Bets !!

    Griffin Warner and Big East Ben talk college basketball betting for this weekend. The Need for Seeds College Basketball Podcast delivered a focused betting breakdown for the January 3 weekend card, with Griffin Warner and Big East Ben targeting marquee matchups and market inefficiencies. The discussion opened with concern around Marquette, where Big East Ben described a team unable to close games under pressure, citing a late collapse against Seton Hall and criticizing the lack of in game adjustments. The betting slate began with Kentucky at Alabama, where the total sat at 172 and the Crimson Tide were favored by five and a half. Big East Ben backed Kentucky as a live underdog, pointing to elite perimeter defense, strong offensive rebounding, and recent form against Indiana and St. John’s, while expressing skepticism about Alabama’s consistency. Warner leaned toward the over, noting historically inflated totals in the series and expecting limited defensive resistance. Attention then shifted to Tennessee at Arkansas, a game that saw heavy market movement toward the Razorbacks. Big East Ben avoided the side but favored the over, emphasizing Tennessee’s dominance on the offensive glass, Arkansas’s reliance on three point volume, and matchup driven scoring opportunities in transition. Warner supported Arkansas at home, citing talent, environment, and perceived undervaluation relative to brand expectations. The Purdue at Wisconsin matchup generated agreement, with both analysts backing the Badgers plus six and a half. Wisconsin’s defensive rebounding, home shooting splits, and the Kohl Center environment were highlighted as key counters to a Purdue team reliant on second chance points. The final game featured UCLA at Iowa, where Big East Ben projected a decisive Hawkeyes win, pointing to UCLA’s road struggles, Iowa’s discipline, depth, and home court strength. Warner agreed on Iowa’s edge but ultimately selected the under, expecting a slower paced game aligned with UCLA’s preferred style. Best bets closed the show, with Big East Ben locking in TCU minus one and a half at Baylor, questioning Baylor’s cohesion and backing TCU’s guard play and physicality, while Warner selected Wisconsin plus six and a half as his top position. The episode framed a weekend defined by home court value, rebounding edges, and selective totals plays rather than blind market favorites. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    26 min
  7. JAN 2

    NFL Player Props Week 18

    Munaf Manji and SleepyJ talk NFL player props for week 18 Munaf Manji and SleepyJ closed the regular season with a focused breakdown of NFL Week 18 player props, emphasizing motivation, usage, and matchup dynamics in a slate defined by uncertainty. They opened with quarterback angles, highlighting Jared Goff under passing yards due to Detroit injuries and a run heavy approach, while backing C J Stroud over his number against Indianapolis based on a consistent history of strong production and recent defensive struggles by the Colts. At running back, SleepyJ returned to Bucky Irving over rushing yards against Carolina, citing Tampa Bay offensive line issues and the need to take pressure off Baker Mayfield, while Manji supported Derrick Henry over rushing attempts in a division deciding game, pointing to recent workload trends and Baltimore reliance on the ground game. Wide receiver discussion centered on Marquez Valdez Scantling over a modest yardage total, driven by increased targets and roster absences that force Pittsburgh to throw, with alternate yardage milestones also discussed. Tight end props followed, including Mitchell Evans over receptions for Carolina in a likely negative game script, and Juwan Johnson over receiving yards for New Orleans as injuries funnel targets his way. Touchdown markets featured Colson Loveland for Chicago based on red zone usage, along with Rico Dowdle and Chigoziem Okonkwo as incentive and matchup driven options. The episode concluded with a best bet on George Kittle over receiving yards in a high stakes matchup, supported by his recent consistency, explosive plays, and central role in the San Francisco offense as teams jockey for playoff seeding. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    46 min
  8. JAN 1

    Dream Pod - Week 18 THE PICKS !!

    RJ Bell, Steve Fezzik and Mackenzie Rivers talk NFL betting for Week 18. RJ Bell opened the final regular season discussion of the NFL calendar with the same energy that has defined his late season handicapping success, framing Week 18 as a uniquely exploitable betting environment shaped by uncertainty, motivation, and market overreaction. Joined by Steve Fezzik and Mackenzie Rivers, the conversation centered on identifying value where public narratives oversimplify complex situational dynamics. Bell emphasized that the final week consistently offers opportunity precisely because bookmakers and bettors struggle to price conditional outcomes tied to injuries, incentives, and playoff scenarios. Fezzik echoed that sentiment, noting that fatigue, short weeks, and misleading priors often distort lines more than raw power ratings. One of the central themes was quarterback uncertainty and how markets tend to overreact to depth chart changes without accounting for coaching adaptability. Bell highlighted Green Bay as a prime example, arguing that Matt LaFleur’s demonstrated ability to stabilize offensive production with limited quarterbacks creates hidden value, particularly when combined with opponent offensive line issues and defensive matchup familiarity. Rather than fixating on spread volatility tied to Minnesota’s quarterback situation, Bell shifted the focus to Green Bay’s team total, isolating the outcome most insulated from late breaking news. Fezzik supported the approach, stressing that removing variables rather than predicting them often produces stronger wagers. Another major focus was Atlanta versus New Orleans, where Fezzik challenged season long priors that favored the Falcons despite recent performance trends favoring the Saints. He argued the line failed to properly account for situational fatigue following Atlanta’s emotional Monday night win and undervalued New Orleans’ sustained improvement in first down differential and overall efficiency. Bell acknowledged Atlanta’s stronger full season profile but agreed the price overstated the gap between the teams, particularly in a divisional matchup with modest home field value. Incentives also played a critical role in the discussion, most notably in Miami’s matchup with New England. Bell detailed how defensive performance thresholds tied to player bonuses could influence tempo and play calling, especially early in the game. The group agreed that first half markets were slow to adjust for the likelihood of aggressive pacing and scoring incentives, creating an opportunity before second half variance and potential rest decisions took over. Throughout the conversation, Fezzik returned to structural betting concepts, including rare but mathematically favorable 10 point teasers in Week 18, where large motivated favorites sit on half point spreads that align with profitable historical thresholds. He outlined a round robin approach designed to manage risk while exploiting market inefficiencies tied to moneyline probabilities. Rivers contributed analytical context on late season team status splits, reinforcing that eliminated teams facing motivated opponents behave differently depending on venue and expectation, with spoiler roles historically outperforming. The discussion closed with a broader reflection on Week 18 psychology, where reputation, incentives, fatigue, and perception often matter more than standings. Bell summarized the approach succinctly, emphasizing that success in the final week comes from understanding why teams behave the way they do rather than assuming effort will always align with playoff math. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 58m

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Winning sports picks from Las Vegas. Everything you need for free on the biggest games each week from Pregame.com's Wiseguy Roundtable. Alongside your host RJ Bell, we have professional bettor Steve Fezzik, plus more of the biggest names from the world of sports betting.

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