Sure there are always one offs. Your chances never go to zero but they decline precipitously after 5.
This is where you and I find ourselves in agreement. If you're waiting around for SGA to fall to you at #11 or Hali to fall to you at #12, well, that's no strategy at all. That's just letting each year pass you by, wondering when you might luck into a franchise-altering talent in the late lottery. It happens, yes.
It doesn't happen often. And if it does, you have to have a plan in place that allows you to
capitalize on that luck. The Kings surely did luck into Tyrese Haliburton, which was fantastic. Then they leveraged that luck into a trade for an All-NBA caliber center. They won a bunch of games. They made the playoffs. They became the darling of the league... and then the Beam Team ran out of steam.
Why did the Beam Team run out of steam? Well, they had few meaningful assets to leverage into further attempts to upgrade their roster.
Why were they short of those meaningful assets? Well, they had never bothered to develop
a strategy that would allow them to stock their cupboards with draft assets so they would always have a path forward to
add talent to their roster. After all, angling for a top talent in the draft is only
one pillar in a successful rebuilding strategy. There's a reason Sam Presti is regarded as a genius. He has worked to always keep the Thunder's cupboard stocked with the assets necessary to
sustain a rebuild.
Yes, Presti found his late lottery luck in SGA, but the Oklahoma City Thunder don't become a perennial championship contender without snagging Chet Holmgren in the top-five. Nor do they become a perennial championship contender without having a stable of first rounders available to supplement both the luck the Basketball Gods delivered unto them (SGA) and the luck they tried to make for themselves (Holmgren). You have to be
proactive. You can't just wait and hope and cross your fingers and call it a day. Luck will only take you so far in this league.
Vivek's sin as an owner is believing that you can shortcut your way to the playoffs, and believing that having a plan is for suckers. You're not getting far in professional sports with the "move fast and break things" philosophy of Silicon Valley. Breaking things is easier than building something. We've learned it the hard way time and again.