I'll stir the pot. Maybe some balls have Alzheimers and can't remember what they are supposed to do while others remember exactly where the little chute is! Maybe that ball bobbing around against the top knows its trapped and trying to escape!
I look at my adopted cat. Now my cat don't know how to type. Probably doesn't know what a keyboard is for except she knows dad uses it. Anyway, today I started a program on another other computer. A bit later I hear clacking. I don't pay attention since its minimized. But when I eventually get up to check the program, I find Panther (some days I think I should have named her Savage Vampire) has put the computer to sleep! Maybe balls are like cats. They don't know what they're doing. All they know is they should be bouncing around.
Personally, I think you can take advantage of statistics to play lottery games. You can't rely on any single statistic to give you all the information you need. But, on the other hand, when people play due numbers, due sums, due pairs they are playing based on a statistic that this number, sum, pair has been missing too long.
In the chart below you can see certain sets in red and orange. Those top 7 sets on the left comprise 41.1 percent of all like sets. The top 7 on the right comprise 37.5 percent of the actual draws. Should it surprise anyone that 6 of the top 7 are the same?
But once you get down to the green sets you're talking horrid odds.....yeah! Odds so bad if the lottery gave you 100 draws for $1 you'd still have than a 1% chance of winning!
Statistics might not give you the one super secret key that unlocks the it, but it can point you in the right direction if you recognize what to look for and how to use it. Over time statistics prove themselves whether it be a workplace accident, a water leak, a major hurricane, a major appliance failure, or the lottery.
You'll never unlock the secret to cats though!