The Pick Results
On Saturday night, February 15, 2025, 11 24 27 31 36 40 reappeared after a -day wait in Arizona. With an expected cadence of 1 in 7,059,052 draws, the gap sits well beyond typical spacing.
Winning numbers for 1 draw on February 15, 2025 in Arizona.
Draw times: Evening.
Our take on the The Pick results
February 15, 2025The Pick report — Saturday night, February 15, 2025: 11 24 27 31 36 40 shows a notable pattern
On Saturday night, February 15, 2025, 11 24 27 31 36 40 reappeared after a -day wait in Arizona. With an expected cadence of 1 in 7,059,052 draws, the gap sits well beyond typical spacing.
Overview
On Saturday night, February 15, 2025, 11 24 27 31 36 40 reappeared after a -day wait in Arizona. With an expected cadence of 1 in 7,059,052 draws, the gap sits well beyond typical spacing.
Combo Profile
Beyond the drought, the numbers show a clean structure: 6 distinct numbers with no repeats, spanning 11 to 40 (wide spread).
Why Droughts Matter
Extended gaps function as context, not a signal - they record variance across time. They make variance visible across extended windows.
Data Notes
The method: this analysis summarizes results recorded for Saturday night, February 15, 2025 and evaluates them against long-run frequency baselines. The goal is context, not prediction.
From Stepzero
The core idea: this series is meant to document distribution behavior over time as a reference point for continuity. The aim is a trustworthy record.
Additional Context
Long-horizon measurement matters most when viewed across extended windows. As samples expand, the distribution becomes clearer and anomalies settle into their expected ranges.
Distribution analysis depends on consistent documentation. Each draw updates the record, allowing analysts to test whether deviations persist, reverse, or revert to expected ranges.
Long-horizon tracking is the only reliable way to separate short-term noise from persistent drift. By logging each outcome against its expected cadence, the system builds a distribution profile that becomes more stable as the sample grows.
Adding to the Long-Term Record
Over the broader record, today's outcome adds another archive entry to the long-run dataset. It is the cumulative record that makes analysis stable.