You're making my point for me. From 5th to 6th the odds of a top 3 pick drop from 29.2% to 21.4%. Drop 2 more positions to #8 and they fall all the way to 10%. If we slide all the way to 8th, we have very little chance of ending up in the top 3.
Where you're incorrect is in your tabulation of losses. Losses matter for playoff spots because teams haven't played the same number of games yet and you can make up wins as long as you still have games to play but you can't take losses off the board. Conversely, wins are what matter for lottery seeding because you can't take those off the board. Change our 4-0 run to 0-4 and we would have the same number of wins as Orlando putting us in a virtual tie for 5th. 4 wins in a row took us from a decent chance at the 5th spot and 29.2% odds to a decent chance at the 8th spot and 10% odds. We play LA twice at the end of the season. Those are almost guaranteed wins. I'm concerned that all hope of a top 3 pick may have just evaporated overnight.
Well for one thing I thought we should have waited another month to hire George Karl, and argued exactly that on this forum at the time. Orlando was kicking the tires but that organization actually knows what they're doing and they're not interested in winning a bunch of games at the end of the year. Karl wanted to come to Sacramento anyway. Cousins and Gay are a decent enough start to stake his reputation on. As for the rest, you're telling me that one month of George Karl is all that held us back from the apocalypse and I find that incredibly hard to believe. DeMarcus was upset, everybody looked unhappy. Fans were asking uncomfortable questions. Fine. Anybody with any sense knows what the long-term goal is. Casual basketball fans are paying the bills, not the diehards like us and those fans will come when the team is winning, period. Nothing else -- not the coach of the team, not end of the year momentum, not DeMarcus' body language in media sessions -- is going to influence them more than that.