History of Irish Lotto
Ireland's lottery history dates back to the Irish Sweepstakes of the 1930s, marked by both scandals and success. Before the Irish Lotto's launch on April 16, 1988, the early sweepstakes were marred by controversies, including an accountant exploiting the system to gain millions.
Irish Lotto history
Ireland (read Northern Ireland) has had a sweet and sour relationship with the lottery that predates the Irish lotto and goes back to the heady days of Irish Sweepstakes during the 30s. A lot happened in the fifty years spanning the sweepstakes of the 1930s and the first draw of the ‘A Crannchur Naisiunta’-the Irish Lotto- held in 1988 on 16th April. The early raffles editions became notorious for scandals rather than triumphs as an accountant outwitted the National Lottery system, and raked in millions.
Though lottery games in Ireland have been played for centuries, sweepstakes started to gather steam following the nation’s independence, which ushered in the prevalence of ‘Irish Hospital Sweepstakes.’ Modern Irish lotto history can be traced back to the 1930s when Ireland was nursing its wounds in the aftermath of the Civil War. The nation was plunged into an abyss of crisis further exacerbated by the ‘Great Depression’.
To finance the construction of hospitals on a war footing, “The Sweeps” (the popular name of Irish Hospital Sweepstakes) was established. Coupons of The Sweeps were sold globally, (albeit illegally), inspiring black marketers which infuriated the Americans. Illegal sales of tickets culminated in scandals that eventually led to the sweepstakes’ being called off for good.
The Irish Government decided to replace the scandal-pockmarked Sweeps with Irish Lotto that would be strictly regulated. Thus, the ‘A Crannchur Naisiunta’ in 1987 with the first flagship drawing game being organized on 23rd March of that year. The chief sweepstake was preceded by scratchcard games, including Windfall and Match 3.
Not only were the games very elementary but even the purses were run-off-the-mill in comparison to what players scoop up nowadays. Nevertheless, the early editions were a hit with the public as huge ticket sales corroborated the masses’ infatuation with the lottery games.
Tracing Irish Lotto history: from 1987 till date
The Republic of Ireland’s state lottery is known as the ‘National Lottery’ (‘An Crannchur Naisiunta’ in Irish). The Irish Lotto or National Lottery was incorporated was incorporated by the Irish government via the ‘National Lottery Act 1986’. The debut drawing was organized in 1987 on 23rd March and players used scratchcards for participating in the sweepstake.
The first Irish Lotto organized in 1988 on 16th April coincided with some landmark events that took place in that same year. Communism was on the verge of collapse and the Republic of Ireland had for the first time qualified for the European Cup. The 16th April drawing turned out to be incredibly contagious as players on either side of the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, participated.
Irish Lotto, in its earliest format, required players to match all the numbers of the six balls pulled out from the lottery machine that stored 36 balls. The holder of the ticket that matched all six numbers could claim a jackpot of £2, 50,000 while those matching 5 or 4 numbers won smaller purses. If nobody won the jackpot, the top prize rolled over to the next draw.
Till 30th May 1990, the draw was held only once weekly on a Saturday. On and from 30th May of that year, a draw was introduced that was to be organized every Wednesday. Since that date, sweepstakes have taken place only twice a week and continue to.
Since the odds of winning the Irish Lotto jackpot were 1 in 1, 947, 792 (not high enough going by top prizes’ standards), one just needed to invest £973,896 to buy tickets containing all the possible combinations. The investor by purchasing coupons bearing all the probable number combinations was almost guaranteed to win the jackpot.
This technicality made the National Lottery sweepstake susceptible to being sabotaged by an investor or syndicate with deep pockets. And it happened in 1992 on 30th May when Stefan Klincewicz, a Polish-Irish magnate formed a 28-member syndicate to buy coupons en masse, containing all conceivable number combinations. The organizer of National Lottery took all possible measures to outwit the syndicate but the latter somehow succeeded in purchasing more than 80% of the ticket combinations.
Klincewicz made a killing, earning a gross profit of about £310, 000. His winnings inspired him to write and publish a tome titled, ‘Win the Lotto’. National Lottery, to thwart such premeditated sabotages in the future, kept on augmenting the odds of pocketing the jackpot. It added 3 extra balls to the lottery machine that originally contained 36 spheres in 1992 and continued adding 3 balls in 1994, 2006, and 2015 respectively.
A typical player who bought an Irish Lotto coupon from 3rd September 2015 onwards had a one in about 10.7 million chances to corner the top prize amounting to €2 million.
Lotto-The flagship sweepstake game
The flagship or the chief drawing game of The National Lottery is Lotto. In its present format, the winning ticket must match all six numbers picked up from a total of 47 numbered balls and the ‘bonus ball’. One has to invest a minimum of €4 to purchase an Irish Lotto ticket imprinted with two sets of six numbers.