Thanks Guesser. Here goes...
Unfortunately, the Red ball cannot be tracked with this workout, but using the law-of-averages as the basis: Since there are 55 White Balls and only 5 are chosen each drawing, each Ball will come up once In 11 drawings. That is the idea from which this system was developed.
Now, we all know that doesn't really happen because 11 Drawings is too small of sample size for the law-of-averages to really work. The result is that some Balls don't come up at all which causes others to come up more than once. The log sheet that I've devised keeps track of Strike Outs, Singles as well as the "Repeats" which are Doubles, Triples, and Home Runs, explained below. Using the logged information from the past 10 Drawings, you predict the winning numbers for the 11th Drawing.
A "StrikeOut" is a number that hasn't been selected in the past 10 Drawings, a "Single" has been hit once, a "Double" twice, a "Triple" three times, a "Home Run" four times, and so on. Obviously, a Home Run is more rare than a Double, so in predicting the outcome of the 11th Drawing you might not want to select the Home Run number. Make sense? But with that being said, playing the contrarian role is another possibility. You can't fall into the false perception that the Home Run number will never be hit because as we all know, previous outcomes have no factor in what comes next. So that's a possible play, too.
As an example, a 'winning combo' for the 5 White Balls might be: 3 StrikeOuts, 1 Single, 1 Double. From the log, I can see that I had the opportunity to choose from 18 StrikeOuts, 25 Singles, 11 Doubles, and 1 Triple. So you can see how that greatly reduces the possible numbers you choose from. It's all about selecting the correct 'winning combo' to greatly increase your chances of selecting the winning numbers. FYI, 2/2/1/0 is the most frequent winner since the 55/42 format started.
I'm currently in the process of tracking 12-Drawing histories, rather than 10-Drawing histories as described above as the 2/2/1/0 combo still doesn't win as often as I'd like.
Does any of this sound familiar or is it a new concept? Looking forward to all replies. TIA!
Dana