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Raphael
Kerkove Won Multiple Prizes in the Monday Midday Pick 4 Drawing
DES MOINES, Iowa – A Jesup man has won multiple prizes totaling
$18,500, all in the same drawing of the Iowa Lottery's Pick 4
game.
Raphael Kerkove claimed six Pick 4 prizes totaling $18,500. He
claimed two prizes of $6,000, two prizes of $3,000, and two
prizes of $250 on Monday at the Iowa Lottery's regional office
in Cedar Rapids. He won all six prizes in Monday's midday
drawing of Iowa’s Pick 4 game. The winning numbers that night
were: 7-6-8-0. Kerkove bought his winning tickets at Caseys,
1330 Sixth St. in Jesup.
Pick 4, which has been offered in Iowa since September 2003,
features a top prize of $30,000, with odds of just 1:10,000 of
winning it. Another intriguing aspect of the game comes in the
variety of ways players can choose to play it. Plays in Pick 4
range from 50 cents to $5 for the chance to match a four-digit
combination of numbers from 0000 to 9999.
There are several ways to win in Pick 4. A player can choose a
straight play, meaning that if the winning numbers are 1-2-3-4,
the player wins a prize for matching that combination exactly:
1-2-3-4. Another option is to choose a box play, which allows
players to win for matching the winning numbers, but not in the
exact order drawn (if the winning numbers are 1-2-3-4, you can
win for a combination of those numbers, such as 4-3-2-1). You
also can choose a straight/box play, which allows you to win for
matching the numbers in the exact order drawn or in any order.
Pick 4 drawings are held Monday-Saturday. The game’s midday
drawings are at 12:40 p.m. with evening drawings at 9:20 p.m.
Winning numbers may be checked at the lottery Web site at
www.ialottery.com or through the winning numbers' hot line at
(515) 323-4633. Winning numbers may also be checked with lottery
retail outlets or by calling the lottery at (515) 725-7900 from
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Since the Iowa Lottery's start in 1985, its players have won
more than $2.4 billion in prizes while the lottery has raised
nearly $1.2 billion for state programs. |