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December 15, 2014
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Very interesting, I posted two singles to play last night, one of them being 356, and the winning number was 935, they flipped the 6 on me. Very interesting.
High Point United States
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June 24, 2007
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Quote: Originally posted by KailaMay1 on Feb 12, 2022
Very interesting, I posted two singles to play last night, one of them being 356, and the winning number was 935, they flipped the 6 on me. Very interesting.
There is not enough data yet to tell whether NCEL is drawing clusters of Date workup hits. However, I just now updated the chart I use to track this stuff and I noticed something peculiar that I thought I would mention. In most lotteries, it's pretty obvious early on that they are accumulating clusters of hits 1, 2, or 3 days apart. I've looked at so many of these that I hardly even need to do the spreadsheet analysis to see what's happening. Not so with the NCEL chart! When I looked at it just now, my spidey senses started tingling and, even though there's not a lot of data points, I did the spreadsheet and found that 2 days and 9 days are consistently the most common intervals. 9 days? Yeah, that's a little unusual. Again, this is the kind of oddball thing that happens when you are working with small amounts of data, but I just can't recall another instance where 9 days became a thing in any other lottery. Here is the latest example:
The other unfortunate thing is that I'm not seeing a pattern of these hits cascading together in a string of hits as I've seen in some other lotteries, so I really don't have a feeling for what's happening here yet. The 9 day thing may just be another great example of yours truly being fooled by randomness...
9 days? SRSLY?
Anyway, I just wanted to let you all know that I am still watching. I'm not at all sure what I'm seeing yet, but I'm still watching...
"When I looked at it just now, my spidey senses started tingling and, even though there's not a lot of data points, I did the spreadsheet and found that 2 days and 9 days are consistently the most common intervals."
North Carolina decided to answer my question last night and dropped a Straight Date workup hit on the 2nd day instead of the 9th day as I speculated.