Celtic welcome Heart of Midlothian to Glasgow on Saturday afternoon in the Scottish Premiership’s Championship Round, and the stakes are obvious enough. The league title picture has tightened into a proper two-horse scrap, with Hearts top on 80 points and Celtic right behind on 79, so this isn’t just a big game — it’s the kind that can swing the whole thing. One point separates them, and there’s no room for a bad afternoon now.
For Celtic, this is a chance to move back to the summit in front of their own supporters and keep the pressure on the leaders. For Hearts, it’s a statement trip: go to the second-placed side, defend first place, and leave with the title momentum still in their hands. Martin O’Neill and Derek McInnes both know what a result here would mean. It’s not a dressing-room-friendly draw. It’s a line in the sand.
There’s also a bit of recent history in the mix. These two have already traded blows this season, with Hearts unbeaten across the last three meetings and Celtic still carrying the memory of that 2-1 home defeat in December and the 3-1 loss in Edinburgh back in October. Yet Celtic’s home record this season tells a very different story. This is a proper top-of-the-table test, and it’s come at the sharp end of the campaign, where every mistake gets amplified.
Celtic Form & Analysis
Celtic arrive with a little bit of wind in their sails, even if their most recent outing was far from clean. They went to Motherwell on 13 May and won 3-2 in a chaotic, breathless game that swung late on. They’d already beaten Rangers 3-1 at home, followed that with a 2-1 away win over Hibernian, and before that put Falkirk away 3-1 in Glasgow. The only slight wobble in the run came in the 2-2 draw with St Mirren in the Scottish Cup, though even that fits the general pattern: Celtic are scoring, and they’re rarely playing dull matches.
That’s the bigger picture. They’ve got seven unbeaten now, and their form reads like a side that has learned how to keep finding a way. The away win at Motherwell was messy, yes, but it also showed resilience. Kelechi Iheanacho’s stoppage-time penalty settled it after Liam Gordon had dragged Motherwell back into the game. Before that, the Rangers victory was more controlled, more convincing. Against Hibernian, they came through a lively away contest with another 2-1 win. The points have kept coming. So have the goals.
At home, Celtic have been strong all season: 14 wins, one draw and three defeats, with 40 scored and only 14 conceded at their own ground. That’s a serious platform. It’s also the sort of record that changes the feel of a fixture before kick-off. They don’t usually let games drift at Celtic Park. The one concern is that they’ve not kept as many clean sheets as the table position might suggest, and their last outing again showed they can be opened up. Motherwell produced 15 shots and 1.21 xGA against them, which won’t make O’Neill thrilled. But there’s no hiding the obvious. Celtic are a dangerous home side and they’ve been in scoring rhythm for weeks.
Heart of Midlothian Form & Analysis
Hearts come in just as confidently, and maybe with a little more discipline in the numbers behind them. Their latest result was a 3-0 home win over Falkirk on 13 May, a clean and efficient performance that never looked in doubt once Frankie Kent opened the scoring. Before that, they drew 1-1 away at Motherwell, beat Rangers 2-1 at home, and edged Hibernian 2-1 away. That’s a strong stretch of results by any standard. It’s also the kind that turns a title chase into something that feels deserved rather than lucky.
What stands out is that Hearts don’t seem to blink much. They’ve gone seven unbeaten, and that run has been built on a fairly steady habit of getting on the front foot first. Against Falkirk, they controlled the game with 12 shots to four and kept the visitors to almost nothing. Against Rangers, they found a way to win a big game without needing to dominate possession for long spells. And away at Hibernian and Motherwell, they’ve taken useful points from tricky grounds. That’s not the profile of a team hoping to hang on. It’s a team with a plan.
Their away record tells the same story. Nine wins, four draws and five defeats on the road, with 29 goals scored and 20 conceded. That’s solid enough to travel well without being flawless. Hearts aren’t going away to shut games down for 90 minutes and pray. They’ve got goals in them, but they’ve also been too open on the road to call them watertight. Their overall league record backs that up too: 66 scored and only 31 conceded, which is tidy work, but not the stuff of a side that can expect to coast through a trip to Celtic Park. Can they keep the lid on Celtic’s attack? That’s the question.
The flip side? Hearts have been hard to beat for ages. Their run without defeat is another reminder that they’ve earned this top spot rather than stumbled into it. Still, this is different. Celtic away is different. The first goal matters a lot here, and Hearts have been conceding first far too often on the road to make anyone fully trust them to control the tempo from the start.
Head-to-Head
These two have been trading punches all season, and the recent results lean Hearts’ way in a way Celtic won’t enjoy hearing. Hearts beat Celtic 3-1 at home on 26 October, then followed up with a 2-1 win at Celtic Park on 7 December. The most recent meeting, back on 25 January, ended 2-2 in Edinburgh. That’s three games without a Celtic win, and it gives Hearts a real psychological edge heading into this one.
The meetings have also been lively. Five straight head-to-heads have gone over 2.5 goals, and both teams have scored in four of the last five. That’s not a fluke. These fixtures have had edge, pace and enough defensive looseness to keep the scoreboard busy. Celtic haven’t kept a clean sheet against Hearts in three meetings, and that’s a warning light they can’t ignore.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Home Win at 1/2 for this one. Celtic’s home record is simply too strong to dismiss, and while Hearts are top of the table, their recent dominance in this fixture is carrying a lot of emotional weight into a game where Celtic have the stronger venue numbers and the sharper attacking habit at home. The market price feels fair. Celtic still look the more reliable pick at Celtic Park.
The 2-1 correct score feels about right. Celtic should create enough to win it, but Hearts have shown across the season — and in this fixture — that they’ll have moments of their own. That makes a clean home win less convincing than a narrow one. If you wanted a livelier angle, both teams to score would fit the recent head-to-head pattern, but the straight home win is the main play.