You seem to have missed the points (though I was being quite sarcastic when I made it, so I can understand that). There really are two points.
1) There is no such thing as an accepted definition for "defying the odds". It's vernacular, not statistics. You appear to have adopted a fairly loose criterion, that is, that if something is less than 50% likely, that its occurrence qualifies as "defying the odds". I don't find 25% so particularly unlikely, but it's totally subjective.
2) In the scenario here (a lottery) exactly one outcome, no matter how unlikely, must occur. Look at it this way: flip a fair coin 100 times, and write down the results. Then ask yourself how likely that outcome was. Since we've assumed that the coin is fair, I don't even need to know what the outcome is to tell you what the likelihood of that particular outcome is: 1 in 2 raised to the 100 power, or in ratio terms (where 0 means impossible and 1 means must happen) 0.00000000000000000000000000000079. I hope I got the right number of zeros there, but you get the point -- that sequence of heads/tails was INCREDIBLY unlikely. But we shouldn't be shocked about it at all -- I mean SOME outcome had to occur. So that fact that out of a very long list of very unlikely outcomes (from an individual point of view) this particular sequence "defied the odds" shouldn't really mean much to us.
Anyway, by your definition, if we have to defy the odds to get the #1 overall, so does every other team in the lottery, and even more so. This would suggest that any outcome of the lottery defies the odds. But barring catastrophe, tomorrow they'll be pulling four balls out of that hopper and damn the odds, they will be defied somehow.