Martin O’Neill’s Celtic scored four goals in extra time to overcome St Mirren 6-2 at Hampden and reach the Scottish Cup final against Dunfermline
St Mirren were forced to put their faith in a teenage goalkeeper who had only just got his driving licence.
However, it was Celtic who successfully manoeuvred their way back to Hampden.
Martin O’Neill is set for a Scottish Cup Final clash – facing his old protégé Neil Lennon’s Dunfermline.
The final 6-2 scoreline shouldn’t deceive you – this match was far from simple.
The comprehensive victory felt unjust on the brave Buddies, who battled back from being two goals behind to push the game into extra time before ultimately being defeated, the Daily Record reports, reports the Irish Mirror.
Celtic appeared exhausted at that stage but surged forward with an extraordinary spell at the start of extra time that decided the outcome.
Craig McLeish’s team suffered major setbacks. Stand-in goalkeeper Ryan Mullen gifted Celtic an early advantage within 55 seconds before limping off with an injury, bringing on 17-year-old Grant Tamosevicius – who had only recently acquired his driving licence.
The youngster performed admirably under immense pressure but his side agonisingly fell apart after staging a valiant fightback at the National Stadium.
Celtic looked comfortable when Tony Ralston struck a powerful second goal, but Mikel Mandron pulled one back before levelling matters in stoppage time.
Saints had momentum while the Bhoys were faltering. Nevertheless, the Hoops found another gear with replacement Kelechi Iheanacho scoring a brace, while Luke McCowan and Benjamin Nygren also found the net in a superb extra time display to keep O’Neill’s quest for more trophies alive.
It was devastating for a Saints side whose game plan fell apart in just 60 seconds after Mullen’s disastrous mistake.
The substitute keeper should have been aware of Maeda’s positioning and dealt with the ball more assertively.
Yet the Japanese forward’s tireless harrying exposed him, with Mullen left fishing the ball out of his own goal.
Celtic endured some nervy passages of play – but Ralston connected with Yang’s clever back heel and crashed a stunning strike in off the woodwork with the last kick of the first half.
Saints were hurt but returned with fresh determination after the break to deservedly reduce the deficit on 53 minutes when Mandron muscled past Kieran Tierney to thump his header into the bottom corner.
The Paisley side kept up their pressure and eventually drew level as the clock hit 90 minutes, with Mandron latching onto Jake Young’s touch to blast past Sinisalo.
Celtic were becoming rattled – but the tie took yet another remarkable turn in extra time with a succession of goals.
Iheanacho put them back in front when he expertly steered home James Forrest’s cracking cross, and moments later McCowan remained calm to tuck away the fourth.
The Nigerian striker superbly dispatched the fifth with his left boot at the near post before Nygren coolly slotted a sixth to finally enable Celtic to cruise through to victory.
Here are five talking points from a Hampden thriller:
FAIRYTALE FINAL
Things haven’t quite gone to plan for O’Neill during his remarkable return this season, but a Hampden final in May seems a fitting way to sign off.
The Northern Irishman is still in the hunt for the league title, although the Scottish Cup looks like the best chance of lifting silverware this term.
The added intrigue of taking on his former protégé Neil Lennon’s Dunfermline outfit only adds to the theatre of what has already been an astonishingly unpredictable season.
TOMBOLA TRUMPS
O’Neill will have plenty of time to ponder his Final starting eleven – although anticipating it remains nearly impossible.
Record Sport’s Chris Sutton called it the tombola, and yet again the Hoops’ boss’s team selection was filled with surprising picks.
Tomas Cvancara was left out completely, Sebastian Tounetki made an unexpected comeback while Arne Engels was brought back into the first team.
The strategy worked in spells – although ultimately not enough.
Celtic looked exposed, sloppy in possession and lacking real cohesion or control.
Iheanacho’s arrival changed the game, but with the forward unable to last 90 minutes, the tombola will keep on turning.
HAPPY DAIZ
Celtic’s opening goal was perhaps the most characteristic Daizen Maeda strike you could imagine. The early effort brought an end to a barren run of 17 games without scoring, and while Maeda was prolific last season, his form in front of goal has been poor this time around and he continued to struggle.
Iheanacho showed the difference a composed finisher makes, and O’Neill will be hoping Maeda’s goal can kickstart his goalscoring form.
KID’S A KEEPER
The loss of Shamal George in goal was already a blow – but it turned out to be just the start of Saints’ goalkeeping nightmare.
Replacement Ryan Mullen suffered a torrid 14-minute period, shipping a goal to Celtic inside 60 seconds before picking up a thigh injury moments later.
The ex-Hoops academy player tried to carry on but was eventually forced off, meaning teenage goalkeeper Grant Tamosevicius was thrust into action.
The youngster responded superbly with a number of fine saves and looked far more comfortable with the ball at his feet than either of the other two keepers on show.
The Buddies didn’t allow the goalkeeping mayhem to knock them off course and Tamosevicius acquitted himself well and didn’t deserve to ship six goals.
SAINTS IN A SCRAP
The dream cup double might be beyond Saints but there’s still much to fight for this season.
Lifting the League Cup back in December will live long in the memory, but the Buddies are intent on ensuring the campaign’s successes aren’t undermined by becoming caught up in a fight against the drop.
Judging by their latest displays, there should be little cause for concern. Form has genuinely picked up in recent weeks, and while the back-to-back defeat to Celtic was harsh, particularly given the severity of this scoreline, it ought to reinforce rather than shake the side’s determination.
Maintain this level of performance and Saints should have enough about them to avoid any play-off worries.



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