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National Lottery postpones midweek draw for first time in 28 years ...
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The National Lottery (Irish: An Crannchur Náisiúnta) is the state lottery of Republic of Ireland. It was created when the Republic of Ireland government passed the National Lottery Act, 1986 to help raise funds for good causes. The eligible causes are sport and recreation, health and welfare, national heritage and the arts, the Irish language, and the natural environment.

National Lottery gaming operations began on 23 March 1987 with scratchcards, and the flagship drawing game, Lotto, began in March 1988. The National Lottery now operates three families of drawing games (Lotto, EuroMillions, and Daily Million), funds televised bingo and game shows, sells a wide range of scratchcards, and runs a number of Millionaire Raffles each year. National Lottery games are available online as well as through a network of over 3,700 retail agents nationwide.

By the end of 2013, the National Lottery had achieved over EUR12 billion in cumulative sales, had paid out EUR6.7 billion in prizes, and had raised EUR4.4 billion for the good causes it supports. In 2011, 2.2 million Irish people (64 percent of the adult population) reported playing National Lottery games, with 1.5 million (42 percent) reporting that they played weekly.

In 2013, due to a financial crisis that had left the Irish state running a large budget deficit, the Irish government agreed to sell the National Lottery licence for 20 years to a private operator, Premier Lotteries Ireland. The new operator took ownership of the licence on 27 February 2014. The government is receiving EUR405 million from the sale, some of which will finance the construction of a new National Children's Hospital.


Video National Lottery (Ireland)



Administration

From its inception until 27 February 2014, the National Lottery was operated under licence by the An Post National Lottery Company (Irish: Comhlacht Chrannchur Náisiúnta An Post), which was 80 percent owned by Ireland's state-owned postal services provider An Post and 20 percent by the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform.

In 2011, in response to Ireland's financial crisis, the government included the National Lottery licence on a list of state assets that could be sold to assist the public finances. In April 2012, the government announced that it would sell the National Lottery licence for a period of 20 years for an upfront payment, while ensuring that 30 percent of lottery sales would still go to fund its designated good causes. The licence was valued at between EUR200 and EUR600 million, with some estimates putting its value in the region of EUR500 million.

In May 2013, the Irish government enacted the National Lottery Act 2013 to allow for the sale of the National Lottery licence, provide for the establishment of a new independent lottery regulator, and eliminate some restrictions on Internet gambling to allow for the growth of online lottery sales. The legislation also added the natural environment to the list of good causes eligible to receive lottery funding.

On 3 October 2013, Minister Howlin announced that the government had agreed to sell the National Lottery licence for EUR405 million to Premier Lotteries Ireland, a consortium comprising An Post, An Post pension funds, and the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (owner of the Camelot Group, operators of the UK National Lottery). Dermot Griffin, head of the An Post National Lottery Company since 2006, was appointed chief executive of Premier Lotteries Ireland. Other existing senior management were also retained. Executives from the Camelot Group, the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, and An Post were appointed to the board of the new company.

The process of finalizing the lottery contracts was delayed due to an industrial dispute involving the employees of An Post National Lottery Company over the terms and conditions of staff transfers to Premier Lotteries Ireland, but the dispute was resolved in February 2014, and contracts were signed on 27 February 2014. Some of the funds paid to the Irish state will be used for a range of local infrastructural projects, including the construction of a National Children's Hospital.


Maps National Lottery (Ireland)



Games

The National Lottery began gaming operations on 23 March 1987, when it launched its first scratchcards. Since then, the National Lottery has expanded its product line to include the Lotto family of games, television bingo, televised game shows, regular "Millionaire Raffles," participation in the transnational EuroMillions lottery, and a daily EUR1 million game called Daily Million.

National Lottery tickets and scratchcards are sold by a network of over 3,700 agents around the country. In March 2009, the National Lottery began offering online sales of instant-win games, as well as key draw games such as Lotto and EuroMillions. Internet sales increased by 43 percent in 2012, to EUR8.7 million, with around 40,000 players registered to play games online.

In 2012, total National Lottery sales were EUR734 million. A total of EUR406 million was distributed in prizes and EUR225 million was distributed to good causes.

All cash prizes won in National Lottery games are paid as tax-free lump sums. All prizes in Lotto, EuroMillions, and Daily Million games must be claimed within 90 days of the applicable drawing dates. No minor under the age of 18 may purchase tickets for or claim prizes in any National Lottery game. Winners have the right to remain anonymous.

Lotto

Lotto, which began in March 1988, is the National Lottery's flagship drawing game. It is currently a 6/47 lottery with an additional "bonus ball." Its starting jackpot is a guaranteed EUR2 million, which rolls over until it is won. The minimum play in Lotto has always been two lines of six numbers each. At Lotto's current cost of EUR2 per line, a Lotto ticket costs a minimum of EUR4. Lotto has produced two spinoff games, Lotto 5-4-3-2-1, which began in 1997, and Lotto Plus, which began in 2000.

The largest ever Lotto jackpot of EUR18.9 million was won on 28 June 2008 by a syndicate of 16 colleagues at a quarry and concrete plant in Bennekerry, Carlow.

Sales of Lotto fell from EUR379.1 million in 2011 to EUR339.7 million in 2012. The National Lottery said that this reflected lower jackpot levels during the year.

History of Lotto

The first Lotto drawing was held on Saturday, 16 April 1988. In its original 6/36 format, six numbered balls were drawn from a lottery machine containing 36 balls. Players could win a share of a guaranteed £250,000 jackpot by matching all six numbers, or win smaller prizes by matching four or five numbers. If no winning ticket was sold, the jackpot rolled over for the next draw. Drawings continued each Saturday night until 30 May 1990, when the National Lottery introduced a midweek Lotto draw on Wednesday nights. Lotto draws have been held twice weekly since that time. The Lotto for Saturday if Christmas Day is falling on Saturday transferred to Christmas Eve, Friday or Wednesday draw to Tuesday (1991-2002) or Thursday in 2013.

In a 6/36 lottery, the odds of matching all six numbers and winning the jackpot are 1 in 1,947,792. At Lotto's initial cost of £0.50 per line, all possible combinations could be purchased for £973,896. This left Lotto vulnerable to a brute force attack, which happened when the jackpot reached £1.7 million for the May 1992 bank holiday drawing. A 28-member Dublin-based syndicate, organized and headed by Polish-Irish businessman Stefan Klincewicz, had spent six months preparing by marking combinations on almost a quarter of a million paper playslips. In the days before the drawing they tried to buy up all possible combinations and thus win all possible prizes, including the jackpot.

The National Lottery tried to foil Klincewicz's plan by limiting the number of tickets any single machine could sell, and by turning off the terminals his ticket purchasers were known to be using heavily. Despite its efforts, the syndicate did manage to buy over 80 percent of the combinations, spending an estimated £820,000 on tickets. It had the winning numbers on the night, but two other winning tickets were also sold, so the syndicate could claim only one-third of the jackpot, or £568,682. Match-5 and match-4 prizes brought the syndicate's total winnings to approximately £1,166,000, representing a profit of approximately £310,000 before expenses. Klincewicz later appeared on the television talk show Kenny Live and wrote a self-published lottery-system book entitled Win the Lotto.

To prevent such a brute force attack from happening again, the National Lottery changed Lotto to a 6/39 game later in 1992, raising the jackpot odds to 1 in 3,262,623. The first Lotto 6/39 drawing was held on 22 August 1992. To compensate for the longer jackpot odds, the National Lottery doubled the starting jackpot to and added a "bonus number" to the drawings. Whereas players previously needed either a match-6, match-5, or match-4 to win, prizes were now also awarded for match-5+bonus, match-4+bonus, and match-3+bonus.

Lotto became a 6/42 game on 24 September 1994, which made the jackpot odds 1 in 5,245,786. The National Lottery made this change to generate bigger rollover jackpots, partly so that people living near the border with Northern Ireland would not abandon Lotto when the 6/49 British National Lottery began operations on 14 November 1994. At the same time, the National Lottery introduced computer-generated "quick picks" as an alternative to marking numbers on paper playslips. Some retailers now only offer the quick-pick option.

For draws beginning on 26 September 1998, the National Lottery increased the cost of a line of Lotto from £0.50 to £0.75. At this time it also doubled the game's starting jackpot to £1 million and increased most of the game's smaller prizes by 50 percent.

With the introduction of the euro currency on 1 January 2002, the cost of a line of Lotto became EUR0.95, and the starting jackpot became EUR1.269 million (the euro equivalent of £1 million). For draws beginning 1 September 2002, the price of Lotto was rounded to EUR1 per line, and the starting jackpot was raised slightly to EUR1.35 million.

Core Lotto sales had declined steadily for six consecutive years up to 2006, falling from EUR314.9 million in 2000 to EUR255.1 million in 2006. Falling sales partly reflected public dissatisfaction with the game during the Celtic Tiger economic boom. As property prices and the cost of living escalated rapidly, particularly in Dublin, a EUR1.35 million starting jackpot was no longer seen as offering the transformed lifestyle promoted in lottery advertising. In November 2006, the National Lottery changed Lotto to a 6/45 game to create bigger jackpots and combat falling ticket sales. It made the starting jackpot a guaranteed EUR2 million, increased the match-5+bonus prize from EUR12,000 to EUR25,000, introduced a match-3 prize of EUR5, and increased the price of a line of Lotto from EUR1 to EUR1.50. The company said that the structural changes were designed to produce about twenty Lotto jackpots of EUR5 million and over each year, and at least one jackpot over EUR10 million. The first 6/45 draw was held on 4 November 2006.

The current odds of winning the Lotto jackpot are 1 in 8,145,060. The odds of getting a match-5+bonus are 1 in 1,357,510; the odds of a match-5 are 1 in 35,724; the odds of a match 4+bonus are 1 in 14,290; the odds of a match-4 are 1 in 772; the odds of a match-3+bonus are 1 in 579; and the odds of a match-3 are 1 in 48.

The Wednesday night Lotto draw on 4 February 2015 was postponed until the following night due to a technical problem with ticket machines. This marked the first time in Lotto history that a drawing was postponed.

As of September 3, 2015, the cost of buying two lines increased from EUR3 to EUR4 and players must now choose from 47 instead of 45 numbers, lengthening the odds of winning the jackpot to almost 11 million (approximately 10.7 million) to one. The odds against winning the second prize have increased also, but so too has the prize value, from EUR25,000 to an estimated EUR100,000. There will also be a new prize for matching 2 balls and the bonus ball.

Lotto Plus

In 2000, the National Lottery introduced Lotto Plus as an add-on to the main Lotto game. For an extra £0.25 per line, players could enter their Lotto numbers in an additional 6/42 drawing for a fixed, non-rolling jackpot of £250,000. The first Lotto Plus drawing took place on 25 October 2000.

In 2002, the National Lottery added a second Lotto Plus drawing, renamed the drawings Lotto Plus 1 and Lotto Plus 2, and raised the cost of Lotto Plus to EUR0.50 per line. The jackpots were fixed at EUR300,000 and EUR200,000 respectively. The first drawings for Lotto Plus 1 and Lotto Plus 2 took place on 1 September 2002.

In November 2006, when Lotto adopted a 6/45 matrix, the National Lottery raised the Lotto Plus 1 and Lotto Plus 2 jackpots to EUR350,000 and EUR250,000 respectively. The cost of Lotto Plus remained at EUR0.50 per line.

In September 2015, following the increase of two extra balls in the machine, the top prize of Lotto Plus 1 was doubled to EUR500,000.

A Lotto Plus raffle was also introduced. Every player that matches the 4 digit raffle number wins EUR300

As with the main Lotto game, Lotto Plus players can win smaller cash prizes for match-5+bonus, match-5, match-4+bonus, match-4, and match-3+bonus. The odds of winning these prizes are the same as for the main Lotto game.

Over 90 percent of Lotto players play Lotto Plus. Sales of Lotto Plus in 2012 were EUR74.3 million.

Lotto 5-4-3-2-1

Based around the main Lotto draw, Lotto 5-4-3-2-1 was introduced in February 1997. It allows players to win prizes by correctly matching one, two, three, four, or five of the drawn numbers. The more numbers players try to match, the greater the prize. Players may base their choices either on a six-number game (excluding the bonus number) or on a seven-number game (including the bonus number). Lotto 5-4-3-2-1 accounted for EUR13.1 million in sales in 2012.

EuroMillions

The National Lottery joined the transnational EuroMillions lottery on 8 October 2004. As of 2012, EuroMillions accounts for 24 percent of National Lottery sales. Several EuroMillions jackpots have been won or shared in Ireland:

  • On 31 July 2005, Dolores McNamara, a part-time cleaning lady from Limerick, won a EuroMillions jackpot of EUR115 million, which at the time was the largest lottery prize ever won in Europe.
  • On 17 November 2006, two Irish winners each received a 5 percent share of an unwon EUR183 million jackpot when it was divided under the draw's 12-week rollover rule among all twenty tickets bearing five numbers and one lucky star. The winners received EUR9.6 million each. One winning ticket was purchased in Foynes, County Limerick and the other in Millstreet, County Cork.
  • On 4 July 2008, a couple who chose to remain anonymous won a EuroMillions jackpot of EUR15 million on a EUR9 quick-pick ticket purchased in Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary.
  • On 12 June 2009, a jackpot of EUR58.8 million was divided among two winning tickets, worth EUR29.4 million each. One of the tickets, a EUR6 quick-pick, was sold in Newcastle, County Dublin. The winning family chose to remain anonymous.
  • On 29 January 2016, a jackpot of EUR132,376,632 was split amongst two winners, one in Ireland and one in France, each getting EUR66,188,316. There is no information about the winner currently.

Irish sales of EuroMillions were EUR131.5 million in 2012, a 3.2 percent increase on the previous year.

Plus

In June 2007, the National Lottery introduced "Plus," an add-on to the main EuroMillions game available only to Irish players. For an extra EUR1 per line, players can enter their five main EuroMillions numbers in an additional draw for a fixed, non-rolling prize of EUR500,000. Players can also win fixed prizes of EUR2,000 for a match-4 and EUR20 for a match-3. The first Plus drawing was held on 15 June 2007. 76 percent of EuroMillions players now play Plus.

Sales of Plus were EUR44.6 million in 2012, an increase of 3.7 percent over the previous year.

Daily Million

In September 2012, the National Lottery introduced Daily Million to replace both Monday Million (a draw game with prizes up to EUR1 million, held once weekly on Monday nights) and All Or Nothing (a daily draw game with prizes up to EUR500,000). A 6/39 weekly lottery drawing with a fixed, non-rolling jackpot of EUR1 million, Daily Million takes place every day of the week, including weekends and bank holidays. It costs EUR1 per line to play. For an extra EUR0.50 per line, players can play Daily Million Plus for a top prize of EUR500,000. The Daily Million/Daily Million Plus draws take place twice a day, every day (2pm and 9pm) at the National Lottery Headquarters under the supervision of Independent observers and National Lottery draw personnel. For some undisclosed reasons the National Lottery does not allow Daily Million Draws to be viewed by the public or streamed online.

All or Nothing

Introduced in October 2009, All or Nothing is the National Lottery's first daily draw game. Players choose 12 numbers from 24; if they get all the numbers correct, or none of the numbers correct, they win EUR500,000--a 1 in 1,352,078 chance of victory. The game has additional prizes of EUR5,000 for Match 11, EUR25 for Match 10, EUR10 for Match 9, and EUR4 for Match 8. Tickets cost EUR2 per line. The numbers are announced on RTÉ Two each night and also displayed through an animated draw on the Lottery website. The game had generated sales of EUR3.4 million by the end of 2009.

Millionaire Raffle

In the summer of 2008, the National Lottery ran its first Millionaire Raffle. These special, limited edition raffles have been held several times a year since then. Two Millionaire Raffle draws were held in 2011 and three in 2012. For the Easter 2013 Millionaire Raffle, 200,000 tickets were available, costing EUR20 each. The raffle had a top prize of EUR1 million, a second prize of EUR250,000, and two third prizes of EUR100,000. Players could also win a range of smaller prizes ranging from EUR10,000 to EUR250. In 2016 this was increased to 500,000 tickets, still costing EUR20 each and having a similar breakdown of prizes. Professional footballer Kevin O'Connor won the 2017 Christmas Millionaire Raffle.

Telly Bingo

The National Lottery introduced Telly Bingo in September 1999. Players buy tickets with 24 randomly generated numbers, and can win prizes by matching the numbers drawn on a lunchtime TV show in a variety of patterns, with a prize of EUR10,000 for a full house. An additional EUR10,000 Snowball prize goes to someone who achieves a full house on or before the 45th number drawn. If not won, the Snowball prize rolls over to the next draw, allowing one additional number each time. In 2012, Telly Bingo sales were EUR17.3 million.

Scratchcard Games

The National Lottery had a total of 30 scratchcard games on offer during 2012, ranging in price from EUR1 to EUR10, and offering instant cash prizes from EUR2 to EUR100,000. Sales of instant scratchcard games rose 3.2 percent to EUR163.5 million in 2012.

Game shows

The National Lottery funds the prize money for two televised game shows. Contestants gain entry to the shows by getting three "lucky stars" on associated scratchcards and submitting them in special envelopes for televised drawings. Broadcast on Saturday nights on RTÉ One since 1990, the game shows have proven very popular, often featuring among the channel's top-rated programmes.

The National Lottery's flagship game show Winning Streak debuted in 1990 and screens weekly between September and early June. A summer companion programme Fame & Fortune was launched in 1996 and ran through the months of June, July, and August until 2007. It was replaced in 2007 by The Trump Card, which was replaced in turn by The Big Money Game, which was replaced by The Million Euro Challenge.


Irish Lotto results for Saturday September 9 as numbers revealed ...
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References in other media

In the 1990s, RTÉ produced a sitcom called Upwardly Mobile about a working-class family who won the Lotto and moved to an upper-middle-class area. It ran for three seasons between 1995 and 1997.

Waking Ned (known as Waking Ned Devine in North America) is a comedy film set in a tiny rural village, based on a fictitious winner of the Lotto.


An Irish National Lottery sign outside a newsagent in Wexford Town ...
src: l450v.alamy.com


References


An Irish National Lottery sign outside a newsagent in Wexford Town ...
src: l450v.alamy.com


External links

  • National Lottery website
  • Irish Lottery Results
  • Irish Lottery Results
  • Ireland lotto

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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