Yes, you're right. I'm the one who's dumb at maths.
I *think* how it works is that everyone enters the ballot individually.
If you get a ticket and one or more of the other people in your bubble also do, you can all sit together. That's the only diffrerence. If you get a ticket, and no-one else does, you go on your own (or turn down the ticket).
Don’t think that’s right. It’s all or none for tickets and seat selection is separate. Below is a quote from the article on the website
‘ Being part of the same group means you will be successful in the ballot together, it does not require you to sit together and does not guarantee seats being available together (please note by having a group this will not increase or decrease your likelihood of success).’
https://tickets.brightonandhovealbion.com/en-GB/categories/ballots
That's what confused me.......I can't work out how the numbers are selected/drawn for there to be an equal chance of being drawn out if you're either in, or not in, a bubble.
I don't think it can be 'one ticket per bubble' going into the draw. Let's say there are 2000 tickets available and bubbles of (using 20,000 STH to make the maths easier) the following:
1000 singles - 1000 entries
4000 in pairs - 2000 entries
6000 in threes - 2000 entries
4000 in fours - 1000 entries
5000 in fives - 1000 entries
Overall chance is 2000/20000 or 1/10
1000 singles - 1000 entries - chance is now 1/7 as 7000 entries if each 'bubble' gets one
4000 in pairs - 2000 entries - chance is 2/7, but each entry covers 2 tickets so is still 1/7
6000 in threes - 2000 entries - chance is 3/7, but each entry covers 3 tickets so is 1/7
4000 in fours - 1000 entries - chance is 1/7, but each entry covers 4 tickets so 1/28
5000 in fives - 1000 entries - chance is 1/7 but each entry covers 5 tickets so 1/35
Lucky Tony has an army of maths geeks working for him to work this out fairly