Weekend Herald

Secrets of a Lotto draw

How overnight millionair­es are made

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Lotto NZ celebrates its 2000th draw tonight, more than 33 years since the first was held on August 1, 1987, hosted by Doug Harvey and Ann Wilson. Since then, more than $ 4.3 billion has been scooped by winners of Lotto’s first division, in Powerball, and Strike games. Tonight, $ 4 million is up for grabs with Powerball. Luke Kirkness reports

All that stands between you and becoming New Zealand’s latest millionair­e is a 20c coin, except, of course, it’s not quite that easy. The coin is tossed four times — to decide which Lotto machine, which Powerball machine, which Lotto ball set, and which Powerball ball set is used.

There are two of each machine and ball sets, with the side of the coin which lands on the back of the Audit New Zealand scrutineer’s hand deciding which is used.

Specific top- secret settings, which can’t be recorded, are checked on the back of each machine as they are set up for the draw. Such are the mechanics behind the set as the draw is held in the depths of TVNZ’s studios on Victoria St West, Auckland. Hours of preparatio­n goes into this two and a half minutes of television.

There are t wo rehearsals and a third, full- dress, rehearsal. The scrutineer, with a Lotto representa­tive, watches to ensure no corner is cut.

The first rehearsals are completed with practice balls which are the same size as the balls used for the dress rehearsal and live draw.

Another Lotto NZ representa­tive loads both the Lotto and Powerball machines with the balls — wearing gloves to ensure no oil gets on them.

Every 10 draws the balls are washed and weighed to ensure they’re the correct weight and if just one ball is off, the set is destroyed.

The 20c coin is kept secure in a locked cupboard onsite with the draw laptop which uploads the drawn numbers to Lotto NZ’s gaming system.

The draw machines and balls are kept in a storage unit, with two keys required to unlock it which are handed to the scrutineer and a Lotto representa­tive by security.

After the coin toss, both machines go through a robust draw cycle. In the rare instance there are issues during testing, the machine is swapped for the other, which is also tested.

In 2014, a fault saw the Powerball machine fail to spit out the winning ball on live television.

On a Wednesday- night draw, the first rehearsal comes at 7.28pm. At 7.34pm the studio receives a call from Lotto NZ’s head office in Newmarket to ensure all terminals have closed.

Then comes rehearsal number two — before the dress rehearsal with the proper balls.

Some crew members have been unfortunat­e enough to watch their own Lotto numbers come up during the rehearsals. One cameraman tells the Weekend Herald he never chooses his own numbers for fear of seeing them in rehearsal

Lotto NZ’s chief executive Chris Lyman agrees: He buys a dip.

“I always worry about playing my own numbers and I don’t play and they come up. That’s probably my superstiti­on: Be random.”

More than $ 4.3 billion in prizes has been claimed by winners of Lotto first division, Powerball and Strike games since 1987.

That’s slightly less than the budget for the country’s largest constructi­on project, Auckland’s City Rail Link, which started out at $ 4.4b.

SINCE THE first draw, Lotto NZ has made a total of 964 people millionair­es and there have been 196 Powerball first division winners since the game began in 2001.

If you bought a $ 7 ticket, which is worth 10 Lotto lines, your odds of winning first division and taking home $ 1 million are 1 in 383,838.

Gambling website Choice Not Chance offers a useful analogy about stars visible in the Southern Hemisphere. There are 4548 of them. Winning Lotto’s First Division i s the equivalent of picking one correct star sometime over the next 84 nights.

Your chances of winning Powerball aren’t flash either — at one in 38 million it’s the same as picking the correct star over the next 843 nights.

But you’ve got to be in it to win it, and sometimes you do, as one former winner told the Weekend Herald.

“They say you’re more likely to get hit by lightning; thankfully I didn’t,” the man, who wished not to be named, said last month.

The Porirua man bagged an incredible $ 15m in 2015. In a move to restore faith in humanity, he held true to a pact he made 10 years earlier and donated $ 7.5m to a friend.

“I’m going to tell my mate that $ 7.5m i s his. But I’m keeping that extra $ 250,000 — I think that’s fair,” he said at the time.

“I can’t wait to tell him — we want to share the joy with this win and we know this will absolutely make his family’s Christmas, as well as ours.”

Before the big win, the man’s friend had been going through some “very tough times” after having a stroke and even a heart attack.

The pair met over dinner a couple of days after the win where the winner shared the great news over the most expensive bottle of wine on the menu.

“I think the staff didn’t know whether to call security or come and join us because we were in the restaurant hugging and crying. It was really, really emotional,” he said.

The man won using his own lucky numbers — some of which include birthdays — and he still uses the same numbers to this day.

After the win he sought good financial advice about what to do for the long term but also how to enjoy the win at the time.

He travelled to parts of the world he had never been to before and even forked out for a new set of wheels.

“I had always wanted a certain type of vehicle and I was able to buy that, it was one of the first things I bought too,” the winner said.

The man says having a good support network around him was hugely beneficial but seeking financial advice was the best thing he ever did.

Now without debts, the man says life has changed for his family forever, but the good fortune also enables him to serve others.

Growing up in Porirua, the man said, his family didn’t have a great deal of anything other than love, “which is all you need”.

But his upbringing inspired him to help others and that is what he does.

“That money has enabled me to help others and actually do what I love, which is helping others within the community I grew up in,” he said.

“The ability to help that communit y, to give kids some hope, to see them really enjoy what we do and what they do i s giving them the

opportunit­y to dream big,” he said.

“It’s just a blessing and a gift for me to see that. I want them to experience, to widen their vision of where it is now.”

The man bought the ticket at the Eastside Four Square and Lotto in December 2015.

Checking the numbers online after the draw, he knew instantly they had won something big.

“We were sitting on the couch, when he started making funny noises and I thought something was wrong,” his daughter said after the win.

“Then he told me to get his wallet and we checked his Lotto ticket together, the daughter said.

“We all just looked at each other and then started screaming and jumping and hugging each other — a bit of a winning dance. We were so excited.”

In 2009, three generation­s of one Masterton family split a $ 36m jackpot. Margaret Heany, her two daughters and a granddaugh­ter split the $ 12 ticket, which was named “Irish Luck” in honour of the family’s Irish roots.

Heany, who died in 2010, and her family donated some of their winnings to the Wairarapa District Health Board to spend on a new ambulance.

“Me and John used the ambulance a lot, it’s time to put something back into the service,” she said in December 2009.

Meanwhile, a Tauranga man who won $ 10.3m in 2017 after winning Powerball had spent $ 4.3m within six months.

Lou Te Keeti found a new “lease of life” buying racehorses and a Mercedes, gave money away to charity and even upgraded a cemetery.

LOTTO ATTRACTS its fair share of criticism from anti- gambling groups — though it isn’t considered one of the more harmful games of chance by the

Problem Gambling Foundation.

Pokies, for example, are continuous — but you can only check the Lotto ticket once.

However, if people weren’t buying tickets out of discretion­ary income that was an issue, the foundation’s Andree Froude said.

“Buying Lotto tickets rather than spending the money on food, healthcare and children is harmful,” she said.

Proactive messaging like “you’ve got to be in to win” also presented issues but Lotto was working to improve harm- messaging.

“Lotto [ i s] working to improve [ these] messages and we encourage this work, especially at the retail end where the seller has the opportunit­y to look for signs of harm.”

All of the profits from Lotto NZ are transferre­d through the Lottery Grants Board to more than 3000 causes and charities.

Over the past 12 years, Coastguard has received more than $ 24.5m through the board. Last year, the service received $ 2.5m, or 11 per cent of their funding.

“The funding we get from Lotto goes directly back to those communitie­s to save lives,” Coastguard’s head of funding Jo Cowie says.

“Over time, I would stress that the funding we have received from Lotto has absolutely provided a financial lifeline for this volunteer organisati­on.”

In the year ending June 30, 2019,

22c was transferre­d to the grants board from every $ 1 of combined sales made.

A total of $ 261m in profit was transferre­d to the board for the year ending

2018/ 2019.

The majority of each $ 1 made — 55c — i s put back into Lotto NZ prizes, with 11c lost to tax, 6c to the retailer commission and the remaining 6c to operating costs.

LOTTO’S FIRST presenter, Doug Harvey, says the launch was “bigger than big”.

“The queues for the first few years, definitely on the Saturdays, they would stretch for blocks down streets in the suburbs to go and get tickets,” he said.

“People would queue for two to three hours to get tickets, it was pandemoniu­m.

“I was the poster boy for the whole thing . . . I used to go to the cricket at Eden Park and kids would spot me and get an autograph.”

Between presenting and his day job, it became quite difficult to manage so he left the gig after about six years.

When he was the host, he would buy a ticket each week and put it close to the Lotto machine, hoping it would bring him some luck. It didn’t.

After spending more than 20 years working in Australia, Harvey and his partner moved back to New Zealand a few years ago and he sometimes buys tickets now.

“If I’m near a dairy I’ll pick up a ticket,” he said. “I just get a lucky dip, I don’t have lucky numbers or anything.”

Jordan Vandermade first started presenting Lotto nine years ago. He was born in the year the first draw was held, 1987.

“My job is actually changing Kiwis’ lives, like actually, and it’s really cool to be playing a really small part in that,” he said before Wednesday’s 1999th draw.

“And, to finally answer it, no I can’t call your numbers but I’ll try.”

The presenters and crew get this

has been with Lotto NZ for 15 years, first starting out on Big Wednesday.

She says the Lotto NZ team are a wha ¯ nau and she’s loved every minute of her time on the programme.

“I love the big draws, when there’s a lot of money on the line,” Gray says. “Jordie and I get to do them together, which is cool.

“The great thing about a jackpot is that it’s got to go, so you know at the end of that night there’s going to be one or more multimilli­onaires.”

Gray seems to think there’s a pact between the two presenters if either of them wins a massive jackpot, but Vandermade doesn’t seem so sure.

Gray says her newfound fortune would be spent going to the world’s greatest sports events; Vandermade is eyeing up ownership of the Blues rugby team.

The first Lotto draw was held on August 1, 1987, for a prize pool of $ 1,028,024, with Division One worth $ 359,808 which was shared four ways.

Tickets for the inaugural draw, hosted by Doug Harvey and Ann Wilson, went on sale from July 22, and the first numbers drawn were 4, 29, 16,

40, 8, and 32.

The first bogus Lotto claim occurred in October 1987 when a counterfei­t was sent to the Lotto head office in Wellington in an attempt to claim a $ 1 million prize.

Less than a year later, in August

1988, a Christchur­ch student in his early 20s became the first millionair­e — after borrowing $ 5 for a ticket.

The biggest prize won by an individual ticket i s $ 44m and was bought by a couple from the Hibiscus Coast in November 2016. More than

2.3 million tickets were sold for the must- be- won Powerball draw.

The jackpot has swelled to $ 50m, the highest it can reach, twice this year but both times more than one ticket holder has shared the same numbers.

Two players both received $ 25.1m in March, while 10 players received $ 5m each in August.

On Wednesday this week, an Auckland player who brought a ticket from Pacific Superette won $ 8.3m with Powerball. It was the fifth time Powerball was struck in September.

Tonight’s 2000th draw has a $ 5m jackpot — but Lotto i s marking the birthday with a giveaway of five lots of $ 2000 cash prizes.

All that money, and it begins with just a 20c coin.

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 ?? Photo/ TVNZ ?? Ann Wilson, Billy T. James, Doug Harvey on set. Wilson and Harvey were the first- ever presenters of the Lotto NZ draw.
Photo/ TVNZ Ann Wilson, Billy T. James, Doug Harvey on set. Wilson and Harvey were the first- ever presenters of the Lotto NZ draw.
 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? Lotto NZ presenters Sonia Gray and Jordan Vandermade. Behind the scenes of the Lotto NZ draw at TVNZ.
Photo / Brett Phibbs Lotto NZ presenters Sonia Gray and Jordan Vandermade. Behind the scenes of the Lotto NZ draw at TVNZ.
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