Scottish Cup

March 13, 2010

Full-time

Kilmarnock

0 - 3

Celtic

Scottish Cup

12:15 GMT, March 13, 2010

Rugby Park, Scotland

Referee: I Brines

Keane hat-trick inspires Hoops

Scoring Summary

Kilmarnock Celtic
 Robbie Keane (64')
 Robbie Keane (81')
 Robbie Keane (82')

Robbie Keane's second-half hat-trick earned Celtic a 3-0 win over Kilmarnock in their Scottish Cup quarter-final clash at Rugby Park.

• Keane targets Cup glory

The home side had the best of the first period with striker Allan Russell clipping the bar with a shot.

However, the tide turned in the 63rd minute when Keane opened the scoring from Edson Braafheid's long ball and two goals within a minute secured the visitors a place in Monday's semi-final draw.

Like last week's win at Falkirk, where Keane helped himself to a brace, the Republic of Ireland international showed why he is worth his £65,000 per week wages with his eighth goal in eight games since arriving from Tottenham in January.

And having dropped 13 points behind Clydesdale Bank Premier League leaders Rangers, Hoops' boss Tony Mowbray will be glad that his side recovered from an indifferent first half in which a cup exit looked possible.

A far from full Rugby Park witnessed a scrappy start to the match.

Celtic captain Scott Brown, playing wide on the right, had the first effort on goal in the fifth minute when he drove at the Killie defence before firing wide from the edge of the box.

Kilmarnock slowly grew in confidence and Russell got the break of the ball in the 14th minute after captain Craig Bryson had driven at the Parkhead defence and his curled shot from 16 yards beat goalkeeper Lukasz Zaluska but clipped the top of the bar.

At the other end a Braafheid free-kick from 25 yards was held by Kilmarnock goalkeeper Cameron Bell, who made an even better save when he blocked Keane's close-range shot after he had been threaded in by Marc Crosas.

But Celtic looked rather disjointed with Keane and Morten Rasmussen isolated up front and the home side pressed with purpose, with only the final pass missing.

In the 38th minute Kilmarnock defender Frazer Wright did well to head away Aiden McGeady's cross from under the bar.

At the other end, Bryson then brilliantly burrowed his way past Braafheid and into the Celtic box, but Russell failed to get on the end of his cut-back.

The visitors, apparently rejuvenated by Mowbray's half-time pep-talk, almost broke the deadlock two minutes after the restart.

Killie failed to clear their lines from a Celtic attack, allowing the foraging Keane to chip the ball up for a McGeady volley which was speeding past Bell and towards the top corner until Wright bravely headed clear.

Moments later, Bell palmed a half-volley from McGeady over the bar for another corner, which again the home side survived.

In the 55th minute Russell again hit the woodwork when Tim Clancy's cross from the left was flicked on by Burchill.

As the Parkhead defence hesitated Russell stole in at the near post but Zaluska did enough to prevent the Killie striker getting a clean shot away and the ball hit the post before bouncing wide.

That was the cue for Mowbray to replace Rasmussen with Georgios Samaras and Crosas with Marc-Antoine Fortune.

But in the 63rd minute it was Keane who gave Celtic the lead and it came courtesy of a long and hopeful ball from Braafheid.

The pass caught the Kilmarnock defence sleeping and Keane's first touch took the ball past Bell and he calmly stroked the ball into the empty net.

As Celtic tightened their grip, Bell made another decent save from McGeady's low drive.

However, the tie was all over in the 81st minute when Samaras robbed the hesitant Wright on the touchline and played in Fortune who rolled the ball past Bell for Keane to tap into an empty net.

A minute later Fortune set up Keane again and this time the Hoops' striker almost casually rattled a drive past Bell to take collection of the match ball.

  • Keane targets Cup glory

    After the match Robbie Keane set his sights on capturing a Scottish Cup medal. "It would be brilliant (to take a Scottish Cup medal back)," the Republic of Ireland striker said. "I'm only here a short space of time and to win something would be fantastic. It is vitally important (that we finish the season with a trophy).

    "At a club like Celtic you need to be involved in these competitions and certainly get to the final and obviously it would have been very disappointing for everyone involved with Celtic if we had got beaten today.

    "So full credit to everyone that we got a good result and we look forward to the next round.

    "In the last few games we have started to pick up and we have had some clean sheets which is always important to the confidence of the team.

    "I don't think we played particularly well in the first half but the manager had a few words at half-time."

    Manager Tony Mowbray, who revealed goalkeeper Artur Boruc missed the game after being given compassionate leave to return to Poland following the illness of a family member, refused to get too carried away by Keane's contribution.

    He said: "As long as he continues to work hard for the team and contribute with goals then I will never have any complaints.

    "If you break the game down, you wouldn't have said at half-time that Robbie Keane was man of the match. He did what he does in the second half. It was great work by Braafheid for the first goal, Georgios Samaras for his second and Marc-Antoine Fortune for his third.

    "It is a team game and he was there to finish them off and that's why he is here, he can do that.

    "The first half wasn't good enough, it wasn't of the standard that we have set ourselves this season. The players were aware of that and we started the second half brightly. Sometimes the difference is the quality of the strike, particularly Keane's third goal."

    In contrast, Kilmarnock boss Jimmy Calderwood lavished praise on the man who ended his cup hopes.

    "In all fairness to Jamie Fowler, he marked him well in the first half and I thought it worked well but you can't keep good players down," Calderwood said.

    "The lad is wonderful and plays with a smile on his face. I watched him down at Tottenham and you could see how much pleasure he takes from playing football.

    "He is probably a very rich lad but he takes so much pleasure, he plays football like a wee boy.

    "But I thought the first goal was poor. I'm not sure if it was down to the keeper or Scott Severin but I don't think the keeper's starting position was right.

    "We had chances but we had to score the first goal."

    Killie striker Allan Russell agreed with Calderwood's analysis of Keane, adding: "He has got to be up there as one of the best strikers in the world.

    "You can't give him time and space or he will punish you with a hat-trick. He is a big player for them.

    "I thought Jamie Fowler did well against him but all he needs is that chance and he will take it."