Then there were four… /Edinburgh derby in Scottish Cup, as Celtic face Dons
Ryan Christie’s free-kick squeezes Celtic past St Johnstone and into semi-finals of the Scottish Cup as they chase quadruple treble Match report & reaction,
Hearts will play Hibs in the semi-finals of the William Hill Scottish Cup. The capital clubs were paired together in the draw made at Mcdiarmid Park after Celtic’s 1-0 win over St Johnstone in the last eight there yesterday.
It is the first time Hearts and Hibs have met at this stage of the competition since 2006, when Hearts won 4-0, and the first Hampden meeting since the Gorgie side defeated Hibs 5-1 in the 2012 Scottish Cup final.
Hibs reached the last four by defeating Inverness Caley Thistle 5-2 on Friday. Hearts booked their spot by virtue of beating Rangers 1-0.
Aberdeen and Celtic meet in the other semifinal, which will also be played at the national stadium. Aberdeen beat St Mirren 2-0 on Saturday to book their semi place.
The ties are due to be played over Easter weekend on Saturday 11 April and Sunday 12 April.
Celtic were made to work far harder than they have been accustomed to by St Johnstone in recent times but still extended both their mastery of the Perth club and their extraordinary winning run in domestic cup football.
Ryan Christie’s 19th goal of the season eventually separated the Scottish champions from opponents they had rattled in 30 goals against without reply in their nine previous encounters.
It was Celtic’s 34th consecutive domestic cup-tie victory as they secured yet another trip to Hampden in next month’s Scottish Cup semifinals with their quest for a quadruple treble firmly on course.
Saints can hold their heads up after a gritty and often enterprising display which saw them briefly flirt with the possibility of upsetting the odds. But, like so many before them, they discovered that this Celtic side simply refuse to entertain the prospect of their vice-like grip on the country’s silverware being loosened any time soon.
Having been so comprehensively swatted aside by Celtic in most of the recent meetings between the sides, St Johnstone’s priority was to remain competitive and defensively robust for as long as possible.
To that end, there was plenty of encouragement for Saints boss Tommy Wright in the manner his players set about fulfilling that requirement.
They were tactically and positionally diligent as they looked to restrict the number of clear-cut chances Celtic could manufacture.
James Forrest has been the main source of Saints’ misery during that run of heavy defeats and the winger was unsurprisingly the first to ask questions of the home defence, cutting inside Scott Tanser and slipping a pass to Christie who curled a shot wide from the edge of the penalty area.
It was far from simply a rearguard action by Saints and they posed an early threat of their own when Matt Butcher dragged a shot off target after Fraser Forster’s unconvincing attempt to punch a Callum Hendry cross to safety.
Slick, incisive football was difficult on the heavy, sodden pitch but Forrest, Odsonne Edouard and Callum Mcgregor managed to combine neatly on the left to carve out a good opening in the 13th minute. Mcgregor’s low shot was gratefully gathered by Zander Clark after it initially looked as if the ball may squirm under the goalkeeper into the net.
There was another response from Saints three minutes later when Hendry guided a header just wide of Forster’s left-hand post from a David Wotherspoon free-kick.
Clark made a fairly routine save to hold an Edouard shot after the Saints defence were unable to properly clear a well dug-out cross from Greg Taylor.
But it was Forster who made the more difficult stops in the remainder of the first half as Saints gave as good as they got. The big Englishman had to back-pedal furiously to touch over a deflected cross from the impressive Drey Wright, then got down to his left to turn behind a stinging shot from the same player who had pounced on slack play by Christie.
From the resulting corner, Forster was called into action once more when he did well to touch over a looping header from Jamie Mccart.
Neil Lennon’s side sought to step up the tempo at the start of the second half and began to create opportunities more regularly. Forrest dragged a shot wide of Clark’s righthand post after a smart 1-2 with Taylor, then Edouard burst forward after a mistake from Jason Kerr but his normal composure deserted him as he sent a poor shot high and wide.
Clark saved well from Forrest, then Leigh Griffiths and Christie both missed the target from inviting positions as Celtic enjoyed some sustained domi
Stephen Halliday At Mcdiarmid Park
nation for the first time in the contest. The increasingly busy Clark kept Saints in it with a couple of exceptional reaction saves, first of all from Christie’s close-range shot and then from a cute back-heeled attempt by Edouard which the keeper somehow diverted on to his left hand post.
The hosts looked to have ridden the storm and had another decent spell of their own during which Forster had to sprint from his line to prevent the hard-working Stevie May from getting on the end of a superb through ball from Ali Mccann.
Just as it seemed the least Saints had earned was a replay, they were undone by a set-piece in the 81st minute conceded by former Celtic defender Mccart’s crunching foul on Forrest.
Christie’s fizzing delivery from the right was the kind defences dread and the ball sailed all the way beyond Clark’s right hand into the corner of the net. It looked as if Christopher Jullien may have got a slight touch to help it on its way but the celebrations indicated it was Christie’s goal.