So if I say it will rain tomorrow and it doesn't and you have to carry an umbrella all day for no reason but the next day it pours and you don't have your umbrella with you... I should praise you for you horrible premonition which did no good for anyone?
I'm advocating a number of things:
1) be grateful for the concern someone had to tell you about the rain they felt was coming,
2) be grateful for the specificity expressed in the prediction,
3) use critical thinking to appreciate the imparted intelligence, act on it as you wish
4a) if it doesn't rain, and you are burdened by carrying an umbrella, acknowledge it but know that you were the decider of the intelligence
4b) if it does rain, and you are prepared, acknowledge that the predictor was also right AND you too were right in your action
5) if it rains the next day acknowledge that, ask yourself, the predictor, and the weatherman why it wasn't predicted then use your critical thinking skills again. You will likely conclude that if no one saw it coming, that is the reason why it wasn't predicted was NOT because they saw it and wanted you to get soaked but simply they didn't see it.
Dude's prediction may not have hit bull's eye but it certainly hit the target.
In golf they get you a standing O for a shot like that, from so far away.