Sunday, 25 November 2012

$325 million Powerball jackpot draws Springs ticket-buyers | tickets, powerball, buy - Colorado Springs Gazette, CO

 

THE GAZETTE The fourth-largest jackpot in the history of the multi-state Powerball drawing meant lots of Colorado Springs dreamers were buying tickets Saturday. “Between 6 and 7 p.m. we’ll get slammed,” said Rene Green, manager of the 7-Eleven store on Garden of the Gods Road in the hours leading up to the Saturday night drawing. Colorado has never had a full Powerball winner. But, when the jackpot gets massive, people who won’t normally buy tickets will buy at least some, and others buy a lot more than usual, she said. “We never buy lotto tickets, and my husband came in and bought some,” Green said of the $325 million jackpot. The last time the Powerball jackpot was really high, the store sold more than $1,000 in tickets in a single day, she said. By 6 p.m., a steady stream of Powerball ticket buyers lined up in the Diamond Shamrock at Delmonico Drive and West Rockrimmon Boulevard. Ticket-buyers were cheerful and optimistic, with the general thought being “why not give it a shot.” “I’ll be selling tickets until the machine turns off,” said clerk Jared Conrad. “I’ll have a lot of customers come in and throw $10 or $20 on tickets.” The big jackpots always boost sales, he said. The Powerball website said odds of winning were less than one out of 175 million, but that didn’t slow down buyers. Some customers plunk down $300 to $400 in tickets in one shot, Green said. The store has seen a few small winners, but nothing major. The jackpot for Saturday night’s 42-state Powerball drawing was up to $325 million, with the winning ticket worth an estimated $212.8 million in cash. If there is no jackpot winner Saturday, the next drawing on Wednesday Nov. 28 could be worth $425 million — the highest Powerball jackpot ever. The King Soopers on Centennial Boulevard also had a steady stream of people buying tickets Saturday afternoon. “I bought two tickets and usually I only buy one,” said Janie Rawlings. Rawlings said she occasionally buys a ticket, but the big jackpot is a big draw. “Somebody’s going to win it,” she said, adding that if she won, some of the money would go to charity and she would buy a house. “I would take care of my family,” she said.

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