17 22 24 38 55 Powerball 24 and Powerplay 3x.
In this drawing, Lottery Power Picks recommended 654 combinations. Of these, we had 18 winners: (11) pb, (5) pb+1, and (2) 3w returning $67 back to our players. Our 5 number pool had 1,580,005 combinations. The first winning other combos were located at:
- 3-w @ # 324 - LPP Winner
- 3-w + PB @ # 9,218
- 4-w @ # 22,585
- 5-w @ # - na -
There were no PB winners so the jackpot grows to $105 million with a cash option of $65.6M and a yield of 2.92%
So, let's see your Lottery Power Picks cost $654 and you made $67? Not a very good ROI on that. Looks to me to be losing at a rate of almost 10-1. And you say that these Lottery Power Picks are better than quickpicks. I don't think so. If you want something that actually works and has some mathematical substance try this guy's strategies at www.theacademyofgambling.com. He gives away his strategies and gives you an education on probability in the process, can't get much better than that!
ReplyDeleteNormally I wouldn't respond to criticizing posts written for the sole purpose of driving traffic to one's newly launched site that contains no original substance, lacks completeness, and contains many spelling errors.
ReplyDeleteBut, your point about LPP returning only $1 for every $10 spent in this past drawing is notable, and highlights the difficulty in trying to recommend the winning combinations. Therefore, it is worthy to discuss with our players.
Lets review the Saturday, January 3rd, 2009 Powerball drawing in detail.
From the LottoReport.com website, we learn that 20,359,193 tickets without the PowerPlay Option were purchased (the site does not report PowerPlay sales). Of these, there were 446,998 winning tickets sold (see the Powerball.com). This means that only 1 in 45.5 tickets actually sold were winners. By comparison, Lottery Power Picks recommended 654 combinations, and 18 were winning tickets, meaning that 1 in 36.3 tickets won. Depending on which way you divide, LPP improved a players chances by either 20.2% or 25.4%
Now, lets look at the cash returned. Powerball paid out a total of $2,641,203 to the non-PowerPlay winners. In that total: 2 were Match 5 winners, paying out $400,000; and, 24 were Match 4+Powerball winners, paying out $240,000. If we remove these winning tickets from the total paid out, we find that $1 in every $10.17 spent was returned to the players. By comparison, LotteryPowerPicks returned $1 in every $9.76 spent, which is more than a 4% improvement for LPP Players.
In both instances, LPP improved the players chances and return. Note that the purpose of LPP is to help me, or someone else, win the lottery. Our recommended combinations are free to all who share the dream of winning. And, because we typically recommend a substantial number of combinations for Powerball and Mega Millions, we utilize this Blog to inform the players of our results (good or bad). We don't believe that anyone else will truthfully divulge their results openly to the public!
Thanks for the post, and good luck with your site.