This weekend, I had my best ever result on the National Lottery. All six numbers!
And the jackpot for that piece of good fortune: a whopper £38.
OK, so the six numbers hit across a combination of two tickets, but they’re the only two tickets I’m involved with. Using the numbers that Claire and I have played for as long as I can remember – it wasn’t quite since the lottery started in 1994, but it wasn’t long after – we had a four-number (£28) and a three-number (£10) hit from the same draw.
Seriously. £28 for four numbers. Isn’t that pathetic?
The odds of matching four is 1031-1. I believe this is only the second time we’ve had a four number win in over ten years, which actually feels about right for playing two lines on a ticket, each for two draws a week and 52 draws a year. In fact, officially it was draw #1224 on Saturday, so I’m ever-so-slightly owed…
So you wait years for a winning ticket, and then two come along at once – and it’s so totally not worth it. Take away the £2 stake and we’re looking at £36 profit – the amount I paid in stakes for just 9 weeks of draws – for this freak occurance.
OK, I know that hitting all 6 numbers from 11 picks (our tickets overlap by one number: 12) is still much more likely than actually winning the big one, but I just don’t expect to ever see six matches again. Sorry, I don’t know the exact odds and I don’t really care enough (read: know how) to work it out. It’s small though.
What I do know is that to have permed those 11 numbers every possible way in order to ensure that I’d hit the jackpot this week would have taken 462 different tickets. I know that when Claire reads this she’ll reach for her calculator to check (and hopefully work out the odds of hitting 6 from 11 too…) but I’m pretty sure that’s right. So if I’d actually made that £462 bet in the past 1224 draws, my total stake would have been £565,488 before it hit.
This week’s jackpot prize fund: £3,583,830. If only I’d known! Split six ways (there were already five other winners) we’d have scored £597,305 each. Over thirty grand profit from my half-million investment – that’s obviously how you’re meant to play the lottery.
But I’ve come up with a another way: don’t bother.
I cancelled my subscription this morning. I feel like a winner already.
EDIT: D’oh. After a sleep I realised I’d already done the hard work for the odds of 6 from 11. If the chances of hitting the jackpot are 1 in 13,983,816, then the chances of striking rich with one of my 462 combinations is 462 in 13,983,816 or about 30,000-1. Actually it’s about twice as likely as hitting five numbers all on one ticket (55,490-1).
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