With their place in the Scottish Cup final in May now secured after the comfortable win over Rangers at Hampden, the focus for Brendan Rodgers and his Treble-chasing squad returned to the Premiership, with the five post-split fixtures to be addressed.

As widely predicted, the two key decisions by referee Don Robertson towards the end of Celtic’s previous League game in Dingwall had been retrospectively reviewed, Ross County striker Alex Schalk offered and accepting a two-match ban for simulation and Scott Brown’s red card downgraded to a yellow. Whilst justice, to some extent, had been seen to be done by arriving at the correct decisions eventually, there still remained a huge degree of frustration that these had been missed in the first instance.

Indeed, Schalk was the second player to receive such a retrospective ban for his actions against Celtic that season. As far back as the opening day of the League campaign, Hearts winger Jamie Walker had taken a blatant dive in the box at Tynecastle, referee John Beaton falling over himself to award the kick which Walker himself took, rubbing salt into the wound by equalising from the spot.

Fortunately, that day Scott Sinclair had snatched a late winner, meaning that at least Beaton’s honest mistake had not cost Celtic any points. Walker was subsequently offered and served the same two-game ban handed out to Schalk, albeit he had made an unsuccessful appeal pleading his innocence.

In this most recent case, the Ross County striker’s now-acknowledged cheating had cost Celtic two points, and whilst he would serve a suspension against teams not now impacting on our destiny, in another scenario those games could have been against the Hoops’ title rivals in a tight flag race.

Further, there was little or no evidence to suggest that Don Robertson would be facing any kind of reprimand or punishment for making such a basic and obvious refereeing error. “There’s something not quite right wrong with this system,” as my dad used to say, God rest him.

Scott Brown’s revised sentence, a yellow card for “recklessly dangerous play,” whilst better than the original red, had still taken him over the disciplinary threshold, invoking an automatic two-game suspension. This would kick in two weeks after the final caution had been awarded (Sunday, 16 April 2017), meaning that the Celtic captain was available for the weekend trip to Ibrox but would miss the forthcoming fixtures against St Johnstone and Aberdeen.

Brendan Rodgers made only one, enforced change to his Hampden line-up, Leigh Griffiths replacing the injured Moussa Dembele, for the short journey to Govan. The teams emerged to a thunderous roar and the strains of Tina Turner’s “Simply the Best,” surely the world’s most misplaced stadium anthem. The Bhoys would show once again where the power lay in Glasgow in the third millennium, dominating proceedings from the outset.

There was a glorious chance for Celtic within two minutes, Scott Sinclair’s sublime flick sending Callum MacGregor scampering clear into the Rangers box. With the restored Griffiths screaming for the pass on the penalty spot for a tap-in, the midfielder chose to shoot, the wrong option, as Clint Hill’s desperate lunge blocked both his effort and Sinclair’s follow-up. A huge let-off for the home side, with Griffiths not missing his young colleague with a verbal tirade.

At this stage, I was still queuing outside the Free Broomloan with my daughter, trying to gauge what was happening from the shouts of the crowd. We finally gained access and emerged at the top of the stairs, just in time to see Sinclair lining up to take a penalty at the far end.

TV would later confirm that the award was given thanks to Myles Beerman’s crazy lunge on Patrick Roberts, as the Celtic winger moved away from goal on the Main Stand side. Thus, for the second time in six days, Sinclair faced Wes Foderingham from 12 yards, the Celt winning the previous joust at Hampden, albeit only just, his countryman getting a despairing hand to the shot but failing to stop it cross the line.

Foderingham went the same way again, however, this time the Celtic forward elected to slot the ball low into the opposite corner, and the Bhoys were ahead within seven minutes. There’s a disgraceful moment which is captured on camera in the aftermath, a Rangers supporter behind the goal making monkey gestures as the Celtic players celebrate. Scandalous and, to the best of my knowledge, unpunished to this day.

Within 10 minutes, Celtic had struck again. Stuart Armstrong’s press forced Emerson Hyndman into surrendering possession, the blond midfielder then feeding Griffiths on the left-angle of the box. This time Sinclair was the player awaiting the pass for his second goal, watching on as the Scotland striker took aim with his trusty left-foot, before rifling a superb shot through Foderingham and into the roof of the net. Wonderful stuff. Celts 2-0 and cruising as the party started in the packed Broomloan Stand.

Before the half-hour, both Celtic scorers should have added to their respective tallies within 20 seconds, following an electric counter-attack by the Hoops. The move began with a fantastic tackle by Jozo Simunovic, sliding in to take the ball cleanly, a split-second before Kenny Miller arrived, the Ibrox striker launched into a spectacular fall, as the home crowd bayed for blood.

Referee John Beaton chose correctly to wave play on, the Bhoys breaking quickly to set up Griffiths, lurking on the right-hand side of the Rangers penalty area. His superb, curling effort beat Foderingham all ends up but came crashing down off the crossbar, the waiting Sinclair presented with a fantastic opportunity to score again but screwing his shot inches past the far post.

Josh Windass, the son of former Aberdeen striker Dean, then decided to take out his own retribution for the Croatian’s tackle with a ridiculous assault on Sinclair, the Ibrox midfielder fortunate to see only yellow for the challenge. And from the free-kick, Windass’ victim had yet another fabulous chance to increase Celtic’s lead, Sinclair perhaps distracted by his teammate Simunovic as he failed to knock Griffiths’ cross home at the far post.

The second half started just as its predecessor had, Callum McGregor foiled in the opening seconds as Foderingham turned away his point-blank effort, after Armstrong’s fine run and cross had created the chance. McGregor would not be denied much longer though, taking a Roberts pass and teasing James Tavernier on the angle of the box in the seventh minute, before coolly slotting the ball between his legs and into the far corner of the net, to continue the Groundhog Day opening to the second period.

With the party now in full swing, it just got better and better for Celtic. Just after the hour, there was another action replay as Beerman fouled Roberts out wide on the right. Again, Griffiths swung in an exquisite cross, the only question being which one of several Celts attacking the ball would get there first, Dedryk Boyata winning that particular challenge to easily head home from three yards for 4-0.

With the home stands rapidly emptying, it was now a question of how many. Stuart Armstrong very nearly grabbed the goal his excellent performance had deserved, his wicked, swerving shot beating Foderingham but also the far post, as we entered the final 15 minutes, his last contribution before making way for Tom Rogic.

Ten minutes from time, I saw something I never thought I would witness at Ibrox, Celtic fans cheering a strike for the home side. Kenny Miller, having finally landed following Simunovic’s tackle, played a one-two with Joe Garner before slotting low past Craig Gordon, a goal strangely reminiscent of the only time he had netted in the Hoops against the original Ibrox club, back in 2006.

The veteran Rangers captain had made a habit of scoring in the fixture pre-Liquidation and had then continued that trend as the second entity came up against the Scottish champions. Miller opened the scoring in the Scottish Cup semi-final 12 months earlier, a feat he repeated in the Ibrox Hogmanay fixture, thus entering the pub quizbooks of the future as the first player to net for all three clubs in this Glasgow derby.

Now though, his goal would be greeted by a different sound, the good-natured cheers of the Hoops faithful in full party mode, singing and dancing along as Madness’ “One Step Beyond,” rather appropriately, boomed out across the stadium speakers. I often think that in these circumstances, just as with the opposition fans cheering your entry to the field as a substitute, a la Andy Halliday in the matches to follow, the game is pretty much up. Total humiliation.

Sadly, for those of a blue persuasion, there was still a final blow to come. The coup de grace. And what a moment it was, Mikael Lustig picking up the ball in the Rangers half and swerving past several opponents before curling the ball into the corner for a goal Lionel Messi himself would have been proud of, the big Swede then sliding in to celebrate with the ecstatic Hoops support, jersey-over-head in an iconic Celtic moment.

Lustig was booked for the latter act, his remarkable final few minutes completed as he took the armband from Scott Brown, the Hoops skipper replaced by Eboue Kouassi having ran the show once again, waving up, fist in the air, as the Free Broomloan roared its approval.

A few minutes later, referee Beaton stopped the non-contest, to an incredible cacophony of noise and explosion of sheer joy all around us, Brendan Rodgers’ domestically invincible Celts achieving an unprecedented second 5-1 derby victory in the same magical season.

It would later transpire that this was also Celtic’s biggest-ever win over Rangers at Ibrox, equalling or superseding a 4-0 victory back in September 1897, depending on your point of view. I recalled sitting grim-faced in that same stand on the receiving end of a 5-1 scoreline – just a few short months after the centenary triumphs of 1988 – and to witness a few other hammerings since.

So, this was a sweet, sweet feeling indeed, especially now being shared with my Celtic-mad daughter. Revenge is a dish best served with five goals at Ibrox.
Despite the historic victory, Brendan Rodgers felt it should have been even more emphatic.

“It was a very comprehensive win. The only disappointment is that we should have scored more goals. What I look for is improvement in performance, and from the first 5-1 to today’s 5-1 there’s a totally different dynamic to the team. I said when I came in [that]my job was to build a team who could go into any stadium without fear and play. Obviously, this is one of the great rivals for Celtic, so for us to come here and show that was pleasing.

“We had a couple of moments, like the goal at the end, which typify it. Our defenders defend forward. They are aggressive, step in, and that’s where the fifth goal comes from, with Mika [Lustig] winning it and then scoring like a winger or centre forward. But you have to earn the right.

“Fundamentally, in any game, you have to defend, and how I like my team to defend is with that aggression and high level of pressing, and the players did it right the way through. From the first to the last minute, their physicality in the game was top class. Rangers started off with a diamond and if you’re not concentrated, not organised, you can get outnumbered and outpassed.

But the players tactically were absolutely superb in the game. So yeah, a big difference in terms of the 5-1 at the beginning of the season to the 5-1 today.”

In addition to their abject humiliation on the field, it had been a day of shame for the Ibrox club off it, due to the neanderthal behaviour of elements of their support. Following on from the monkey gesture aimed at Scott Sinclair, after the Englishman had opened the scoring from the spot, one supporter escaped from the Govan Stand to confront Celtic skipper Scott Brown on the pitch, before being hustled away by police and security staff. Then, after Dedryk Boyata had made it 4-0, a battery was thrown from the same section of the ground, narrowly missing Leigh Griffiths. The irony of a charging device being launched at the wrong side would almost certainly have been lost on the perpetrator.

As I write this, I am thrilled to receive the lovely news that my third grandchild has just arrived in this world, a second boy, as yet unnamed. Suffice to say, I’ll be making a strong case for Mikael Messi Corr!

Matt Corr

An extract from INVINCIBLE by Matt Corr

Matt Corr with Invincible

An extract from INVINCIBLE by Matt Corr, available to order at Celtic Star Books and it also comes with an Invincible t-shirt iincluded (pictured below) if you remember to tell us your size! (S,M.L,XL and XXL all available, just add you preferred size to the Notes section when ordering.

Here’s our Mikael Lustig photo-gallery….

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – SEPTEMBER 23: The Celtic team celebrate victory after the Ladbrokes Scottish Premiership match between Rangers and Celtic at Ibrox Stadium on September 23, 2017 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

Paris Saint-Germain’s Brazilian striker Neymar (R) falls after a tackle from Celtic’s Swedish defender Mikael Lustig during the UEFA Champions League Group B football match between Celtic and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) at Celtic Park in Glasgow, on September 12, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / FRANCK FIFE (Photo credit should read FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images)

(L-R Back Row) Celtic’s Scottish goalkeeper Craig Gordon, Celtic’s Croatian-born Bosnian defender Jozo Simunovic, Celtic’s French midfielder Olivier Ntcham, Celtic’s Scottish defender Kieran Tierney, Celtic’s English midfielder Scott Sinclair and Celtic’s English midfielder Patrick Roberts, (L-R Front Row) Celtic’s Scottish defender Anthony Ralston, Celtic’s Scottish midfielder Stuart Armstrong, Celtic’s Swedish defender Mikael Lustig, Celtic’s Scottish midfielder Scott Brown and Celtic’s Scottish striker Leigh Griffiths during the UEFA Champions League Group B football match between Celtic and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) at Celtic Park in Glasgow, on September 12, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / Andy BUCHANAN (Photo credit should read ANDY BUCHANAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Celtic’s Swedish defender Mikael Lustig (C) takes part in a training session at their training centre in Lennoxtown, north of Glasgow, on September 11, 2017 on the eve of the UEFA Champions League group B football match between Celtic and Paris Saint-Germain. / AFP PHOTO / FRANCK FIFE (Photo credit should read FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images)

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND – JULY 14: Leigh Griffiths of Celtic and Mikael Lustig of Celtic remonstrate with the referee as objects are thrown during the Champions League second round first leg qualifying game between Linfield and Celtic at Windsor Park on July 14, 2017 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. (Photo by Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND – JULY 14: Mikael Lustig of Celtic throws his shirt to the small group of Celtic fans of after the Champions League second round first leg qualifying game between Linfield and Celtic at Windsor Park on July 14, 2017 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. (Photo by Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – MARCH 12: Mikael Lustig of Celtic arrives at the stadium prior to the Ladbrokes Scottish Premiership match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park on March 12, 2017 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Celtic’s Swedish defender Mikael Lustig (L) throws in the ball as Ranger’s English manager Steven Gerrard (2R) and Celtic’s Northern Irish manager Brendan Rodgers (R) look on during the Scottish Premiership football match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park stadium in Glasgow, Scotland on September 2, 2018. (Photo by ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP) (Photo credit should read ANDY BUCHANAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Celtic’s Swedish defender Mikael Lustig (L) vies with Ranger’s English striker Kyle Lafferty during the Scottish Premiership football match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park stadium in Glasgow, Scotland on September 2, 2018. (Photo by ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP) (Photo credit should read ANDY BUCHANAN/AFP via Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – APRIL 29: Mikael Lustig of Celtic celebrates his sides third goal with his team mates while wearing a police mans hat during the Scottish Premier League match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park on April 29, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – APRIL 29: Tomas Rogic of Celtic celebrates after scoring his sides fourth goal with Mikael Lustig of Celtic during the Scottish Premier League match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park on April 29, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – APRIL 29: Tomas Rogic of Celtic celebrates after scoring his sides fourth goal with Mikael Lustig of Celtic during the Scottish Premier League match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park on April 29, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – APRIL 29: Tomas Rogic of Celtic celebrates after scoring his sides fourth goal with Mikael Lustig of Celtic during the Scottish Premier League match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park on April 29, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – DECEMBER 02: Odsonne Edouard of Celtic celebrates with Mikael Lustig after he scores his third goal to complete a hat-trick during the Ladbrokes Scottish Premiership match between Celtic and Motherwell at Celtic Park on December 2, 2017 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – MARCH 31: Mikael Lustig of Celtic tackles during the Ladbrokes Scottish Premiership match between Celtic and Rangers at Celtic Park on March 31, 2019 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – JANUARY 23: Mikael Lustig of Celtic in action during the Ladbrokes Scottish Premiership match between Celtic and St Mirren at Celtic Park on January 23, 2019 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – DECEMBER 08: Mikael Lustig of Celtic celebrates with team mates after he scores his team’s third goal during the Scottish Ladbrokes Premiership match between Celtic and Kilmarnock at Celtic Park Stadium on December 8, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – DECEMBER 02: Scott Brown and Mikael Lustig of Celtic lift the trophy in victory after the Betfred Cup Final between Celtic and Aberdeen at Hampden Park on December 2, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)