I remember Carl Sagan making the very statement.
This gives a picture.
Are the Odds Against the Origin of Life Too Great to Accept? (Addendum B to Review of David Foster's The Philosophical Scientists)
However, with the application of the magic of 'natural selection' these odds are rendered moot.
You misunderstood Sagan's argument. I use a similar one involving bridge hands. The "odds" against something happening are very often misleading. If you use an argument incorrectly you may draw ridiculous conclusions. Here is what your article said about Carl Sagan:
"Carl Sagan
Even Carl Sagan has been cited, from a book he edited, Communication with Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (MIT Press, 1973), a record of the proceedings of a conference on SETI. Sagan himself presented a paper at that conference, in which he reports (pp. 45-6) the odds against a specific human genome being assembled by chance as 1 in 10^2,000,000,000 (in other words, the genome of a specific person, and not just any human). As a build-up to this irrelevant statistic he states that a simple protein "might consist" of 100 amino acids (for each of which there are 20 "biological varieties") for a chance of random assembly, for one specific protein of this sort, of 1 in 10^130. He uses these statistics as a rhetorical foil for the fact that no human genome is assembled at random, nor did life have to start with only one possible protein of a particular, specific type, but that "the preferential replication, the preferential reproduction of organisms, through the natural selection of small mutations, acts as a kind of probability sieve, a probability selector," so that one must account for natural selection in estimating the odds of any alien species existing elsewhere in the universe, and not just calculate the odds of random assembly like the examples he just gave. Nevertheless, Sagan's words are used against him by Christians who grab at the numbers without paying attention to their context, or indeed to the fact that Sagan uses extremely simplified equations and assumptions."
Sagan pointed out that by odds arguments it is "impossible" for an individual to be born. And yet that happens every day. The odds of any individual being born is all but zero. The odds of somebody being born is approaching one. That means that somebody will be born, but you cannot predict ahead of time the exact genetics of the person about to be born.
The same applies to evolution. The odds of one particular species evolving is practically zero before it evolves. The odds that evolution will occur is practically one.