Insider Lottery Tips

I know someone who swears by this. All seems like BS to me

http://entertainment.howstuffworks.c...e-lottery3.htm

Quote:

If you've been playing for any length of time, by now you've
surely heard the advice: "Don't play popular numbers." Why?
Certain groups or combinations of numbers are played by
hundreds or even thousands of people on any one Lotto
night. So why would you care about that? Because if you
played 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 and those numbers were drawn,
there may be thousands of people to split the prize with. In a
$5 million jackpot, you could end up with less than a Pick 3
payoff. What are the popular combinations? There are the
sequences such as the one just given as well as sequences
of multiples of a certain number. One popular sequence,
which consists of multiples of the number 5, is 5, 10, 15, 20,
25, and 30. And because the number is considered lucky,
people often play the multiples of 7: 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, and
49.

Another less common practice is to use all numbers of the
same value. Sometimes people will play all numbers with the
value of the number 3: 3, 12, 21, 30, 39, and 48. Suppose
your primary number is 3, because your birthday is March
21. As you previously learned, 21 -- or any number with the
value of 3 -- is lucky for you. However, don't use them all on
the same play slip. Spread them out over several different
plays. Other selections aren't so apparent. What, you might
ask, is so common about this combination: 8, 11, 18, 21, 28,
and 31? If you fill in these squares on some states' Little Lotto
or Lotto play slips, you'll see that these make a zigzag pattern
depending on the layout of your play slip.

Many people select numbers that, when marked in the
squares, create a design on the play slip. Common patterns
are horizontal, vertical, and diagonal lines; letters of the
alphabet such as X or M; the four corners and center of the
play slip; zigzags; and crosses. Even if you do win, playing
popular ticket patterns will reduce your share of the jackpot --
sometimes significantly.

A few years ago, the typical five-out-of-five pot for a Florida
Fantasy 5 drawing was approximately $20,000. But one night,
the payoff for winners who picked five out of five correctly
was just a little over $1,500. Why? The winning numbers -- 3,
11, 13, 15, and 23 -- formed a perfect cross. People tend to
think alike when it comes to playing numbers, so try to avoid
the most logical patterns of play. As for the most popular
single numbers (those not part of a popular series), they are 1
through 31 -- the birthday numbers. This is not to say you
should avoid playing your birth date.

Just don't make a habit of playing all low numbers on one
ticket. Keep in mind that the digits 1 through 9 are even more
popular. Keep those to a minimum. It seems there are few
hard and fast rules in Lotto, though. There have been
multimillion-dollar jackpots in which the winning numbers
were all low ones (but since they weren't popular
combinations of low numbers, the winners didn't have to split
the jackpot with many other winners). Although the results
aren't as dramatically disappointing as with popular numbers,
another way you may lose out -- even if you win -- is when
the jackpot is large. When there is no winner for a while, the
prize money rolls over and, in a sort of snowball effect, grows
ever larger. The more people buy tickets, the bigger the
jackpot grows. And the bigger it grows, the more people buy
tickets. Lured by pots of $30 million, $50 million, and higher,
players come out of the woodwork. Even those who don't
usually play the lottery will play the lottery!

So if you correctly pick five out of six, there may be many
more five-out-of-six winners than usual, which may mean less
money for you. If the name of the game is to win, and the way
to win is to lessen the odds, why join the crowd? Go ahead
and buy a ticket for the big-money drawing. But smart players
quietly prefer the "small" jackpots, those of only $2 million,
$4.5 million, or $6 million. This is called maximizing the value
of your prize. If you think about it, those "small" jackpots
would be pretty nice prizes to win, too.


Insider Lottery Tips