Team: Sean MacCumhaills
If you were throwing a party and you could invite anyone in the world, dead or alive, who would you ask around? Ricky Bobby or Alan from the Hangover would have to be top of the list.
Where do you like to go out to celebrate after a big victory? Heeney’s was always the go to before Covid. I’d say you’ll find a few lying round Jackson’s when all opens again.
What’s the worst pitch you’ve ever played on? Has to be Dungloe.
Which character in any film are you most like? Chazz Michael Michaels from Blades of Glory was a hero of mine.
Damien Venuto: The one thing Kiwi businesses don t need to hear in 2021
10 Dec, 2020 04:52 AM
4 minutes to read
Predictions are notoriously difficult to get right. Photo / Getty Images
OPINION: Judging by the recent stream of emails and social media posts offering predictions and trends on what to expect in 2021, you d think 2020 was just a standard nothing to see here kind of year.
It takes a particularly acute case of audacity to swirl the tea leaves after the past 12 months and pretend to see patterns revealing what comes next.
Anyone venturing such predictions might bear in mind economist Irving Fisher s infamous claim, just before the Great Crash of 1929, that stock prices had reached a permanently high plateau . And even in less extreme times, numerous studies have shown that humans are notoriously bad at predicting the futures that don t benefit them.