I posted this in the Kings-beat-the-Mavericks thread, but I think it's even more relevant in this thread:
Look at the top 3 draft picks for the last 7 years (below). In hindsight, only one of the three (on average) looks to be a justified top 3 pick. If you expand from the top 3 to the top 5, or to the top 10, the lesson is the same. Only about 1 in 3 high draft picks look justified with the benefit of hindsight. If you expand back beyond 2010, the same lesson is there, too. So the teams follow these prospects and (hopefully) make informed choices (draft picks). But the odds of a high pick being justified are not good! Doesn't mean it's a total crap shoot, but it does mean that there's a significant element of chance. In other words, I see no reason to assume that having a top 3 draft pick is significantly better than having a top 6 draft pick. And I see no reason to assume that having a top 6 draft pick is significantly better than having a top 9 draft pick. Yes, the chances are better, but not significantly better. I think you can significantly affect your odds if you allow uninformed people to influence the decision. Remember Jimmer? T-Rob? Unfortunately, the Kings have made their share of bad draft decisions. But that was then and this is now.
2016:
Ben Simmons, 76ers
Brandon Ingram, Lakers
Jaylen Brown, Celtics
Too early to tell if any of these guys should have been in the top 3.
2015:
Karl-Anthony Towns, Wolves
D'Angelo Russell, Lakers
Jahlil Okafor, 76ers
May be too early to tell, but right now it looks like only KAT should have been in the top 3.
2014:
Andrew Wiggins, Cavs (then to Wolves in the Kevin Love deal)
Jabari Parker, Bucks
Joel Embiid, 76ers
At this point, only 1 or 2 of the 3 should have been in the top 3 (depending on your optimism for Embiid's health).
2013:
Anthony Bennett, Cavs
Victor Oladipo, Magic (then to Thunder in the Serge Ibaka deal)
Otto Porter, Wizards
Oladipo and Porter are good players with fine upsides, but I'm not sure that any of these guys should have been in the top 3.
2012:
Anthony Davis, New Orleans
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Bobcats/Hornets (then to ...)
Bradley Beal, Wizards
Only 1 of the 3 should have been in the top 3, although Beal's star is rising.
2011:
Kyrie Irving, Cavs
Derrick Williams, Wolves (who cares the journey from there)
Enes Kanter, Jazz (then to Thunder)
Only 1 of the 3 should have been in the top 3.
2010:
John Wall, Wizards
Evan Turner, 76ers (then to Pacers, Celtics, Blazers)
Derrick Favors, Nets (then to Jazz)
Only 1 of the 3 should have been in the top 3. Favors is not a bad player, but a top 3?
I think this is an interesting point, so I decided to go check since 2000 (not counting the last 3 drafts, it's too early to judge) how many all star players were selected in the top 3, then from 4 to 6, from 7 to 9 and from 10 to 12. These are the results:
2000
1-3: 1 All star player (Martin)
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Magloire, Redd
2001
1-3: 2 ASP (Chandler, Gasol)
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 1 ASP (J. Johnson)
Others: Randolph, Parker, Arenas, Okur
2002
1-3: 1 ASP (Yao Ming)
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 1 ASP (Stoudamire)
10-12: 1 ASP (C. Butler)
Others: Boozer
2003
1-3: 2 ASP (Lebron and Melo)
4-6: 3 ASP (Bosh, Wade, Kaman(...) )
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: West, J. Howard, M. Williams, Korver
2004
1-3: 1 ASP (Howard)
4-6: 1 ASP (Devin Harris...)
7-9: 2 ASP (Deng and Iguodala)
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Nelson
2005
1-3: 2 ASP (Bogut and Deron Williams)
4-6: 1 ASP (Paul)
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 1 ASP (Bynum)
Others: Granger, Lee
2006
1-3: 1 ASP (Aldridge)
4-6: 1 ASP (Roy)
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Rondo, Lowry, Millsap
2007
1-3: 2 ASP (Durant and Horford)
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 1 ASP (Noah)
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Gasol
2008
1-3: 1 ASP (Rose)
4-6: 2 ASP (Westbrook and Love)
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 1 ASP (Lopez)
Others: Hibbert, Jordan
2009
1-3: 2 ASP (Griffin and Harden)
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 2 ASP (Curry and DeRozan)
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Holiday, Teague
2010
1-3: 1 ASP (Wall)
4-6: 1 ASP (Cousins)
7-9: 1 ASP (Hayward)
10-12: 1 ASP (George)
Others: -
2011
1-3: 1 ASP (Irving)
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 1 ASP (Walker)
10-12: 1 ASP (Thompson)
Others: Leonard, Butler, Thomas
2012
1-3: 1 ASP (Davis)
4-6: 1 ASP (Lillard)
7-9: 1 ASP (Drummond)
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Green
2013
1-3: 0 ASP
4-6: 0 ASP
7-9: 0 ASP
10-12: 0 ASP
Others: Antetoukounpo
So, this is the total:
Pick 1-3: 18 ASP on 42 picks (42,86%)
Pick 4-6: 10 ASP on 42 picks (23,81%)
Pick 7-9: 9 ASP on 42 picks (21,43%)
Pick 10-12: 6 ASP on 42 picks (14,29%)
All the other picks: 27 ASP on 663 picks (4,07%)
Of course it's an easy way to look at it, but if you are looking for a franchise player you are looking for all star level. It seems that picking between 4 and 9 doesn't change a lot. Here what you need is a real good eye for talent, and it's what the Kings have been missing for too many years.
This looks like it's going to be a deep draft, with a lot of talent available. We should be able to find a good player with our picks.