A lot of people who play the lottery do not put much thought into how they select their numbers. Many just pick birthdays, anniversaries, house numbers or, special dates in their lives. There is nothing wrong with them doing this but, how many people are born on the same date etc. I bet the lottery operators rubbed their hands with glee when thousands on thousands started taking the same lottery numbers draw after draw.
It only takes one or two of the numbers not to be drawn, to reduce the number of winners and amount of money they have to pay out. I'm not saying there is any thing un-towards happening with the draws but, I for one do not normally take the same numbers again and again on the Lottery.
When I first started to study the Lottery seriously I looked for patterns emerging, one of them was, how many times an odd or an even number was drawn. I soon realised, that it didn't realy matter if it was an odd number or an even number that was drawn, what did matter was, the type of combination you took?
After many years of playing and observing the lottery, I have used every thing I know about the combinations, to help me select the numbers for each of the competitions. Every combination of six numbers drawn, represents a number from 21 to 279. The number 21 and 279 have only one combination each. These two numbers along with any number that is made up of six consecutive numbers, would only be drawn if Merlin the wizard of Camelot cast his spell.
Like I said every combination of six numbers drawn represent a number from 21 to 279. If you were to ask a thousand people to select six numbers each, 999 would probably pick six numbers that added up to an odd or, an even number, not a whole number: example: 150. Even though every number stems from an whole number, a whole number would be the least likely number to be darwn.
Look at the table on the next page!
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