Hearts on brink of 'great season' with Scottish Cup Final and European football
The Jambos beat rivals Hibernian 2-1 at Hampden Park
Robbie Neilson urged Hearts to make a good season great by bringing the Scottish Cup back to Tynecastle next month.
The Jambos booked a place in the final against either Celtic or Rangers with a hard-fought 2-1 win over 10-man Hibernian at Hampden Park.
Terrific strikes from forward Ellis Simms and defender Stephen Kingsley propelled the Gorgie side into a two-goal lead in 21 minutes before Hibs midfielder Chris Cadden immediately reduced the deficit.
Easter Road midfielder Joe Newell was sent off in the 64th minute by referee John Beaton for picking up the second of two yellow cards for a foul on Peter Haring but although Hibs kept pushing for a leveller the Tynecastle side held out to reach their third Scottish Cup final in four years and to ensure they would be in European football of some sort up until Christmas next season.
Neilson, whose side beat Hibs 3-1 at Tynecastle in the league last week, said: "It is massive for the club.
"Prior to the game we spoke to the players about forgetting about getting to a final, forgetting about European football, it is about winning a derby.
"We won last week with 20 minutes where we could actually enjoy it.
"Now we have four or five months until the next derby so we can enjoy the period.
"We have a few days off and then we have five games in the league that we want to win to set us up for the Scottish Cup final.
"It has been a good season. Today makes it a really good one.
"Can we make it a great one in the final?"
"When you play in derbies it is about winning them, we have managed to do it back-to-back at home and now at Hampden.
"I thought we started well, we got a two goal lead and then lost a goal quickly, it knocked us out of our stride.
"Hibs were the better team after that, even when they went down to 10 men. We had periods where we kept it but weren't aggressive enough to go and kill the game and even to the last minute were almost hanging on."
Neilson will ensure the money from European football next season will be spent wisely.
"It will make a difference," said the Jambos boss who will "wait and see" the extent of Craig Halkett's injury after he was taken from the field in a stretcher following a tackle from James Scott.
"It is guaranteed money but we have to be careful how we spend that money, we don't want to chuck it all in.
"We have to build the club gradually over the next three, four, five years to get consistent European football and try to challenge for the title."
Hibs boss Shaun Maloney admitted he had asked his side for a more physical approach following their defeat at Tynecastle last week and had had no complaints about Newell's dismissal, saying, "I could understand it".
He said: "We had to. Last weekend there was a physicality and strength to Hearts that we had to match.
"I asked the players to play on that edge. Hearts dominated physically last week but today that wasn't the case.
"I thought my team's performance was excellent, as good as it's been in the three or four months I have been here.
"I couldn't be more proud of them and what they gave me, going down to 10 men I thought we were the more dominant team.
"Extremely disappointed for the fans. What you seen from the support at the end was something I haven't really seen before in a big derby defeat.
"I have never seen a support give a reception to a team that has lost in a derby like we got at the end."