SACRAMENTO – One lucky California Lottery player who purchased their Daily Derby ticket in Los Angeles for last night’s draw is a half million dollars richer this morning. Their ticket matched all three horses and the race time and is worth $536,442.
The winning ticket was sold at Tag’s Liquor located at 3866 Crenshaw Boulevard in Los Angeles. The winning horses were: 1st place – 10 – Solid Gold; 2nd place – 7 – Eureka; and 3rd place – 11 – Money Bags. The winning race time was 1:42:94.
Daily Derby combines the fun and excitement of horse racing with several ways to win, including the chance to win twice on a single ticket. This unique game was the first horse racing themed game in the U.S. played on regular Lottery terminals. The game can be played at any of our 20,000 retailers by selecting three horses from a field of 12; one to finish 1st, one to finish 2nd, one to finish 3rd; and a race time.
Lottery players can pick their horses before 6:30 p.m. for the current day’s draw. The Daily Derby draw is held at approximately 6:35 p.m., at which time you can get winning information from your retailer’s terminal, or you can visit the Lottery’s website at www.calottery.com/winningnumbers/ for the results.
The California Lottery wants to remind winners to sign the backs of their tickets, keep tickets in a safe place and contact Lottery officials or visit their local Lottery District Office (www.calottery.com/AboutUs/Locations) as soon as possible. Winners have 180 days from the date of the draw to claim prizes.
More than 95 cents of every Lottery dollar is returned to the community in the form of contributions to education, prizes and retail commissions. The California Lottery contributes at least 34 cents of every dollar that players spend on Lottery products to public education and returns more than 50 percent of sales to players in the form of prizes. Since its inception in 1985, the Lottery has contributed nearly $21 billion to California schools out of total sales of nearly $56 billion. Retailers benefit too, earning $3.6 billion in compensation since 1985.