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The EuroMillions game this Friday 21 October will offer a after no ticket matched all five main numbers (18, 23, 37, 46 and 48) as well as both Lucky Star numbers (02 and 10) on Tuesday 18 October. This jackpot will come less than a week after the Lotto game delivered a triple rollover payout to five players last Saturday, and even if the same number of players were to win the top prize in the EuroMillions game this Friday, the £41 million that is on offer would still give each one a personal fortune of around £8.2 million.
A family holiday is on the shopping list for a game on Saturday 1 October. The lottery results for that draw were 04, 15, 17, 26, 37 and 41, and the Bonus Ball was 29. Michael and Christine McNeil, along with their adult children Ian and Samantha, won £106,339 after matching five main numbers and the Bonus Ball, and now Christine and Michael intend to pay off their mortgage before booking a holiday for the whole family.
The second provides no more information than that, we can report from our own investigations that the number of players who won £500 or £50 by matching four or three numbers exceeded 23,000.
Five tickets matched all six main numbers required to win the £14,663,305 to play for this Tuesday 18 October. Of course, the Millionaire Raffle game did produce a winner, and it was the number GRG285911 which made someone £1 million richer on Friday.
to the lucky winner.
Lottery players who don’t succeed in landing the £23 million rollover jackpot in the EuroMillions game this Friday 14 October will be able to have a go at winning a triple rollover Lotto jackpot on Saturday that is estimated to be worth around £14.4 million. Whilst triple rollovers are fairly common in the EuroMillions game they tend to occur far less often in the Lotto game simply because the odds of winning a Lotto jackpot are so much better – 1 in 13.9 million as opposed to 1 in 116.5 million. This makes Lotto draws extremely popular, and our advice is to plan ahead and buy your tickets early for the draw this Saturday.
The EuroMillions jackpot in the draw on Tuesday 11 October wasn’t won by any player, so it rolls to the next game this Friday 14 October, when it will have an estimated value of around £23 million. Now that isn’t quite the same as the £101 million EuroMillions jackpot recently won by , but it’s still a very large sum of money and should be more than enough to satisfy even the most ambitious players. And, don’t forget, when you play the EuroMillions game in the UK, every entry you purchase also gives you one entry into the Millionaire Raffle game which never fails to pay out its £1 million prize.
The winners of the £101 million EuroMillions jackpot on Friday 7 October have gone public and can therefore be named as Dave and Angela Dawes of Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. The couple aren’t actually married right now because they couldn’t previously afford it, but Angela took Dave’s surname anyway and the win of £101,203,600 means that they can now officially tie the knot in style. Dave and Angela are the third biggest lottery winners in the UK, which is a remarkable achievement, but what is even more incredible is the fact that they had only played the EuroMillions game twice before!
A skydiver who used to jump for the National Skydiving Team of Bulgaria won a sky-high prize of £1,000,000 in the game on Tuesday 6 September and to mark the occasion he decided to make a jump with the winning ticket on his person. George Traykov, who is 43 and lives in Ilford, Essex, only plays the EuroMillions game when the jackpot reaches a certain level, and he didn’t think to check his Millionaire Raffle number for the 6 September draw until the recent spate of rollovers had settled down. When he did get around to checking his ticket, he discovered that the number SLW245268 had won him a million!
Saturday night saw the first ever , how many players scooped the jackpot (if any) and how many players got lucky on of the lower prize tiers.
A jackpot outright last Friday 7 October and we are delighted to report that the owner has already been in contact with lottery officials to make their claim. No details of the winner have been made available so we do not know if the ticket was owned by an individual player or a lottery syndicate. Whatever the case we are fairly confident that there will have been some serious celebrating taking place somewhere over the last day or two, and we will of course bring you further details about the winner(s) as and when they become available.
A game on Saturday 1 October. The lottery results which gave the syndicate a jackpot win worth £6,873,588 were 04, 15, 17, 26, 37 and 41. Whilst it is obviously a massive achievement to beat odds of 1 in 13.96 million and win the jackpot under any circumstances, the success of this syndicate is even more remarkable for the fact that it has only been playing since January of this year. The 16 members will now share the jackpot equally, which gives them £429,599 each.
Normally when lottery draws are talked about, it is due to their phenomenal jackpot prizes on offer that creates a stir within the lottery community. However, this has not been the case for Richard Desmond’s latest venture - the widely criticised appears to be creating publicity for all the wrong reasons courtesy of the highly controversial matter that is the Health Lottery's charitable donations.
The jackpot for the game this Saturday 8 October has soared in value after no player matched the six main numbers required to win the £2.14 million jackpot on Wednesday 5 October. The Lotto results were 09, 15, 17, 29, 30 and 39, and the Bonus Ball was 11. No jackpot winner in the midweek game means that the next Lotto jackpot will be worth around £6.5 million and that will come just one day after lottery players have a go at winning themselves a jackpot of around £100 million in the EuroMillions game on Friday.
The EuroMillions Superdraw jackpot game on Tuesday 4 October resulted in a to play for this Friday 7 October. The EuroMillions results which eluded players worldwide were 14, 16, 23, 38 and 45, with 08 and 11 being drawn as the Lucky Stars. The good news for EuroMillions players in the UK is that the Millionaire Raffle game can always be relied upon to create a brand new millionaire winner, and the lucky number which did the trick last night was BPH373751.
Most players know that the odds of winning any prize in the UK Lotto game are around 1 in 54 and the odds of doing the same in the game are around 1 in 13, so how can we expect such lottery averages to pan out in the real world? Well, we can’t expect the averages to be exact for every player (it is a fact of life that some players will win more often than the averages suggest whilst some will win less often) but if there was a player (we will call him Mr Average) who experienced lottery averages exactly as stated and exactly ‘on time’ then the following would hold true…
The inaugural as the operators are being a little coy about where and when the draw will take place and at what time. A phone call to the helpline number shown on the Health Lottery page shed a little more light on things.
What with the EuroMillions rollover jackpots that have been up for grabs in recent draws and the €100 million EuroMillions Superdraw coming up tonight (Tuesday 4 October), it may have escaped the attention of lottery players in the UK that the multi-rollover jackpot in the game was landed on Saturday 24 September. One ticket matched all six main numbers (02, 07, 19, 23, 33 and 43) to win €11,033,593 and we are delighted to tell you that the owners of that winning ticket have decided to go public. We can therefore bring you news that the ticket was owned by the McIntyre family who live in Belmullet, County Mayo.
A EuroMillions (around £85 million) will be taking place this Tuesday 4 October, so players who haven’t yet purchased tickets for the draw tomorrow night are advised to do so as soon as possible. Three players who can afford to take their time about the Superdraw are the ones who shared the triple rollover jackpot last Friday 30 September. The jackpot for that game had a final value of £41.73 million, so each of the players who bought a winning ticket won a share worth around £13.91 million. Of course, players could do even better in the Superdraw this Tuesday!
A will be the top prize in the final game of the month tonight (Friday 30 September). Every ticket purchased for the game will give its owner a 1 in 13 chance of winning a EuroMillions prize of some kind and, as one UK player discovered last Tuesday, the non-jackpot prizes can still be well worth winning. We are of course referring to the UK player who matched five main numbers and one Lucky Star number on Tuesday 27 September to win a second-tier prize worth £855,670.
The . That’s a prize worth almost three quarters of a million pounds, so whoever was lucky enough to take second place in the midweek Lotto game has an excellent excuse to throw a party this weekend.
A game on Saturday 17 September. The syndicate, which calls itself the Barnado’s Lowestoft Team, has 22 members who play a total of 31 lines, so the prize is worth £4,176 for every line played, which isn’t bad at all. The Lotto results for Saturday 17 September were 02, 03, 06, 41, 44 and 45, and the Bonus Ball was 10.
One lottery player got this week off to a fantastic start by winning the top prize on Sunday 25 September. The Lotto Plus 5 game can only be played by those who play the main Lotto game on Saturday or Wednesday, and when it is played a single modest fee enters the player’s Lotto numbers into five Lotto Plus 5 draws which take place on non-Lotto days. The top prize is fixed at £250,000 and the Lotto Plus 5 numbers which enabled one player to land that sum on Sunday were 08, 14, 16, 17, 21 and 36. The Bonus Ball was 06.
This weekend will see the launch of the highly-controversial Health Lottery, after its sole investor Richard Desmond announced plans for his latest moneymaking venture earlier this year. With tickets scheduled to go on sale on Thursday 29th September 2011, the society lottery has come under severe criticism by charity leaders – over the fact that the will be giving considerably less to good causes in comparison to the National Lottery.