With there likely being a lot of rotating occurring over two games in as many
nights I think predicting the line - up is about a safe bet as a lottery ticket... Everyone just cross their fingers for no f @ #king injuries!!
Not exact matches
So as I was preparing to get some sleep last
night, I saw the
predicted lineups saying that Howedes was going to start and all I could
think to myself was something along the lines of «Nahhhhhhh..»
With all the excitement around the Iowa caucuses in New Media Land, you could be forgiven for
thinking the biggest contest of the
night was seeing who could most convincingly
predict the results on Twitter and Facebook.
«We had more violence and more death last
night, and I
think, in some ways, the cruelest situation is when you can
predict the violence and you can
predict the death, and you still can't do anything about it, and I hope this is a wake - up call,» Cuomo said.
A little more from Mark Z. from the interview... (42:53) «One of the things one of my friends and I were messing around with the other
night was seeing if we could comput who we
thought would be in a relationship... and we realised we had over a third chance of
predicting which two people would be in a relationship in a weeks time.»
Having already offered my idiosyncratic take on the movies of 2015, as well as some preliminary
thoughts on the Oscars when the nominations came down, I
thought I'd get right down to the business of
predicting the lucky few who will be toting statuettes as they exit Hollywood's Dolby Theater late Sunday
night.
The last time Deakins managed that feat was in 2002, for his work on the Coen brothers» The Man Who Wasn't There, and while we
predicted that Deakins would complete the hat trick on Oscar
night (we even
thought he was due after five nominations), he lost to Andrew Lesnie's epic - scale lensing of Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, which surely benefited that year from being the only film in this category that was also up for best picture.