Which incidentally, isn't that uncommon and not so horrible a strategy. Remember right next to the $10k, you've got two zeroes. Although you'll (virtually) never win the big money, you should be able to give yourself a modest payday by playing to the side, and if that's good enough for you, go for it.
Why would it be? You'd have to hit all five zeros before dropping off to the side comes out ahead, since even one $10k hit is twice as good as the best-case scenario that doesn't hit one. Not to mention that you've STILL got a good shot of missing the center of the board entirely from the middle and ending up in those
modest piddling amounts on the edges.
I would be surprised if the actual rate of chips ending up in the middle slot on the show was below 20%.
Believe it or not...
Using historical averages gleamed from Scorpz's site, your typical Price is Right contestant will hit the center slot 14.2% of the time, which means there's a slightly better than even chance (roughly 55%) that the jackpot will not reset before Friday.