Kelechi Iheanacho converted a 99th-minute penalty as Celtic edged Motherwell 3-2, keeping the Scottish Premiership title race alive until the final weekend. Hearts still lead the standings, yet Celtic’s late winner means a home victory over Hearts on Saturday would now secure the championship for Martin O’Neill’s side.
Hearts had earlier strengthened their position with a 3-0 victory over Falkirk at Tynecastle, putting pressure on Celtic before kick-off. Had Celtic dropped points at Fir Park, the champions would have needed to beat Hearts by three clear goals in Glasgow to take the title. Instead, Hearts now require only a draw to claim a first league crown since 1960.
The winning moment came deep into stoppage time when Sam Nicholson challenged
Austin Trusty near the touchline. Referee John Beaton paused play and went to the pitchside VAR monitor, before ruling that Nicholson had either handled the ball or caught Trusty with an elbow. The decision awarded a penalty, and substitute Iheanacho stayed calm to score with almost the final kick.
That call stunned Motherwell, who thought Liam Gordon’s 85th-minute strike had earned a point. Gordon swept home after sustained visiting pressure, levelling the match at 2-2 and silencing the away end. Celtic players complained for only a short spell, then pushed forward again, and Nicholson’s challenge eventually brought the decisive intervention from the officials.
Earlier, Motherwell had seized control when Elliot Watt fired the hosts ahead in the 17th minute, punishing slack Celtic defending. O’Neill’s team responded before half-time, with Daizen Maeda supplying the equaliser to steady nerves. Benjamin Nygren then completed the turnaround, giving Celtic a 2-1 lead and apparently putting the visitors on course for a more routine success.
Instead, Celtic struggled to maintain the intensity shown in the recent win over Rangers. The performance was patchy, with misplaced passes and hesitant defending allowing Motherwell to stay in contention. The late penalty rescued the result, yet O’Neill will know levels must rise against Hearts, even with home advantage and a title on the line.
#MOTCEL | #CelticFCpic.twitter.com/wm82GZIOccCeltic Football Club (@CelticFC) May 13, 2026
Celtic Scottish Premiership title race analysed by key match statistics
Numbers from Fir Park reflected a tight contest rather than Celtic dominance. Expected goals data showed Celtic at 1.37 and Motherwell at 1.21, yet 0.78 of Celtic’s xG came from Iheanacho’s penalty. O’Neill’s side did create four big chances compared to two for Motherwell, but the display fell below the standard reached against Rangers.
Elsewhere, the result in Lanarkshire dampened celebrations in Edinburgh but did not remove Hearts from control of the title race. Third-place Rangers endured further disappointment, losing 2-1 at Ibrox to Hibernian after a late winner from Dane Scarlett. Rangers captain James Tavernier did not play, leaving the stadium before kick-off after apparently being omitted from what was expected to be a farewell home appearance.
Iheanacho’s contribution highlighted the depth available to O’Neill in the closing stages of the campaign. This fixture marked only Iheanacho’s 12th league appearance of the season, yet the forward has now scored five times. If Celtic finish above Hearts, the penalty against Motherwell may be remembered as one of the defining moments of Iheanacho’s time in Glasgow.











