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Man wins jackpot cash with NC lottery ticket he didn’t really want to buy

“They were actually sold out of my first choice, so I got that one instead,” Randy Suthard said.
“They were actually sold out of my first choice, so I got that one instead,” Randy Suthard said. NC Education Lottery photo

Lottery players have their favorite games, but occasionally desperate alternative choices must be made.

That happened to Randy Suthard of Buncombe County, North Carolina, and it actually proved to be lucky.

He opted to get a $5 Red Hot Slots ticket and it was worth $200,000, the N.C. Education Lottery said in a Jan. 23 news release.

“They were actually sold out of my first choice,” he told lottery officials, “so I got that one instead.”

Suthard beat odds of 1 in 1,461,660 to win a jackpot. The scratch-off game relies on matching symbols rather than numbers, like an old fashioned slot machine.

Initially, Suthard wasn’t exactly sure how to read the ticket.

“At first I thought it said $2,000. ... Then I looked harder and realized, ‘That’s the big daddy,’” he said. “It was kind of unreal to be honest.”

Suthard picked up his winnings Thursday, Jan. 23, at lottery headquarters in Raleigh, and the prize came to $143,501 after state and federal with holdings, the lottery officials said.

He intends to use some of it to pay bills “and put some money toward his retirement.”

The ticket was purchased at the Hot Spot convenience store on Brevard Road in Asheville, about a 130-mile drive northwest from Charlotte.

Randy Suthard of Buncombe County bought the Red Hot Slots ticket at the Hot Spot on Brevard Road in Asheville.
Randy Suthard of Buncombe County bought the Red Hot Slots ticket at the Hot Spot on Brevard Road in Asheville. Street View image from Oct. 2023. © 2025 Google
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This story was originally published January 24, 2025 at 8:29 AM with the headline "Man wins jackpot cash with NC lottery ticket he didn’t really want to buy."

MP
Mark Price
The Charlotte Observer
Mark Price is a state reporter for The Charlotte Observer and McClatchy News outlets in North Carolina. He joined the network of newspapers in 1991 at The Charlotte Observer, covering beats including schools, crime, immigration, LGBTQ issues, homelessness and nonprofits. He graduated from the University of Memphis with majors in journalism and art history, and a minor in geology. 
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