Umm...
You can read the color code on that resistor.
The cap, you can read the value on, and get it off an online calculator.
TYPICALLY, when you lose a combiner or splitter resistor, you've had a problem with at least one transistor..... And if you took out the capacitor in the bias network (odd, actually), you probably SHORTED a transistor, which is even a bit MORE odd.
Yet another reason for a 2 cent steering diode on the base supply, but I digress.....
The wilkinson splitter / combiner actually dumps the power into that resistor when an imbalance happens.... So, when everything is working correctly, that resistor sees NO power. As SOON as an imbalance happens, the resistor eats up the power needed to keep the power split evenly... IE, lose 1 transistor in a 4 pill, that transistor is dissipating either 25 percent of the rated power out or in.
If it's a pair, 200 ohms. If it's a single, then it's a 100 ohm resistor. You can use a half watt there, and you want non-inductive.
The cap is.... Well, I'll let you figure that part out, you actually HAVE a part nomenclature. Google is your friend.
--Toll_Free