Celtic will take on St Mirren in a repeat of the Premier Sports Cup Final, while Dunfermline Athletic face a derby against Falkirk, after the draw for the Scottish Gas Scottish Cup Semi-Finals took place on Sunday evening at the SMiSA Stadium in Paisley.

The draw followed St Mirren's hard-fought 2-1 victory over Partick Thistle. First half goals from Dan Nlundulu and Jake Young had the Saints on their way, and although Ben Stanway's low strike made it a nervy finish, St Mirren held on to secure their spot in the last four.

The draw was made by Hibernian cult hero Conrad Logan, the goalkeeper who famously came in for the Semi-Finals and Final of the 2016 Scottish Cup, when Hibernian lifted the trophy for the first time in over a century.

St Mirren triumphed 3-1 in the Premier Sports Cup Final in December to win their first major trophy for 12 years. 

High-flying Falkirk sit comfortably in the top half of the William Hill Premiership following their promotion from the Championship, but they will have to face a Dunfermline Athletic side who have already knocked out top flight opposition twice this season in seeing off Hibernian and Aberdeen.

Logan joined host Amy Canavan to conduct the proceedings in Paisley.

The matches will take place on the weekend of Saturday, 18 April.

Logan achieved cult hero status with Hibs a decade ago when he first came in to make his debut - and his first club appearance for 16 months after injury - following a suspension for number one Mark Oxley ahead of the Scottish Cup Semi-Final against Dundee United. 

The goalkeeper became an instant hero in Leith, making a string of saves during a goalless 120 minutes before saving two spot-kicks during the shoot-out. 

He would keep his place for the final against Rangers the following month, when Hibs famously triumphed 3-2.

Reflecting on those memories from a decade ago, he said: "I had been out for such a long time injured so just to get back on the pitch and get back playing was exciting.

"Thankfully the day went well in the Semi-Final. It was nice to get the 120 minutes and make some saves, but when it goes to a penalty shoot-out, as a goalkeeper it's your chance to be a hero and you just hope that you can go the right way and get in the way.

"For me personally, after being injured, and with the length of time Hibs had gone without winning the cup, it was fairytale stuff.

"The remit was to come up and sit on the bench so anything extra was a bonus, and to finish the way that it did was perfect.

"There's players who have played a lot more games for Hibs than me, and players who have played a lot better than me, but my contribution was part of the story and people don't forget it which is nice.

"When I go abroad or see Hibs fans in the UK they always bring up the memories of 2016 so it's nice to be thought highly of in that regard.

"The way we won it in the last few minutes in the Final was surreal. Everyone dreams of playing in those games in the big stadium and to do it the way we did it was the perfect end to the story."

Current Hibs boss David Gray famously headed in the winner that day and Logan admits he always knew of his ex-teammate's leadership qualities, adding: "He was a leader on and off the pitch so it's no surprise he's gone into coaching and management.

"I'm glad he's done it with Hibs and I hope he can be successful with them. They've done okay this year. There's been stages where it's maybe not gone quite as well but they've picked up.

"When the other side of the city's doing well it can get overshadowed a bit but it's not been a terrible season for them and they'll be hoping to improve next year."

Logan hung up his gloves last year and he has taken his first steps into management with his local English non-league side Anstey Nomads.

With David Nugent as a coach and former teammates Martyn Waghorn and Jack Colback on the books, the 39-year-old is relishing his new role.

He added: "I don't intend to put the boots back on now because I'm really enjoying the management side. 

"We've got Martyn Waghorn, who ironically I played against in that Cup Final for Hibs, and Jack Colback is also helping us out so it's been great to have them and the publicity that brings.

"At first I thought I would miss playing and it would be a difficult transition but I've got a good bunch of lads and a good staff and we're doing well so I'm enjoying it."

Scottish Gas Men's Scottish Cup Semi-Finals 

Celtic v St Mirren
Dunfermline Athletic v Falkirk