Perhaps the BBC took it from one of Celtic's games against Aberdeen this season, or from the games against Rangers, Kilmarnock, Hibs, Dundee United, or either one of those costly draws against Falkirk.
That Celtic lost to St Mirren is one thing, the scale of the defeat (4-0, not enough to be officially termed a "rout", this one falls under the "comprehensive" category) is quite another.
That defeat keeps the gap between Celtic and Rangers at 10 points, but Rangers have two games in hand over the Parkhead side, making any hope that Celtic will have had of catching up with their arch rivals pretty much a moot point (though as we said earlier this week, Caley are about to overtake Dundee in Division One, finally overcoming a bigger deficit than Celtic face currently).
The virtual vultures are circling again, getting lower and lower with each passing week and each passing gaffe. Mowbray is refusing to talk about his future at the club, even though most of the rest of the press are not so coy. The warning sign will come when the dreaded vote of confidence comes along, something that current West Ham (and possibly future Celtic manager) Gianfranco Zola will probably know only too well.
Update: Hold the press: he's been sacked. Or walked away. Or is it "by mutual consent"? Neil Lennon will take over, making him an even bigger target for every malcontent ned around the Greater Glasgow area than he has ever been.
Sacking yet another manager - it would be the fifth SPL manager to lose his job and the tenth managerial change overall in Scottish football this season - is such a good idea remains to be seen.
I worry that the trigger-happy Boards and Directors, buoyed on by equally trigger-happy fans are only making the task of creating a solid foundation on which to build for better futures just that bit harder.
With every sacking comes a financial penalty (lengthy contracts to be paid off, other clubs compensated and so on), a stability hit (new manager means new players and tactics) and a feeling of having to start from scratch again. The expectations of the Board and the fans never change, but as we know, Rome wasn't built in a day, and neither is a successful football club built with a never-ending changing of the guard.
Truly successful teams are built upon steady foundations. Witness Aberdeen and United in the early 80's, Rangers during their nine-in-a-row run (Souness for the first three, Smith for the remainder), Celtic in the 60's and 70's, all examples of teams with a steady hand on the tiller. Would any of these teams been have as successful had they chopped and changed managers after a poor result as often as their modern-day counterparts are now doing? I'd hazard a guess that they probably wouldn't.
Rangers' glee at Celtic's misfortune will have been dampened somewhat by their own exit from the Scottish cup, thus denying Walter Smith another treble. The 1-0 defeat to Dundee United, for whom David Robertson scored in the last minute to put the high-flying Arabs into the semi-finals where Raith Rovers await them.
Raith, for their part will probably have mixed feelings about this result; financially speaking, a Rangers win would have been better, with even a half-filled Ibrox earning them more than a full Tannadice could ever do.
Whether Raith have an easier fixture against United than they would have done against Rangers we'll never know, but I reckon they'd have had a good a chance as any, Rangers plodding on this season without really playing particularly well. But as I often hear said, the mark of a true champion is the capacity to keep winning when you're not firing on all cylinders, something Rangers could certainly be accused of this season. It also helps that your nearest rivals are making such a shite of their season.
The SPL is done and dusted for me. Rangers will win the title, Celtic will self-destruct if Mowbray leaves, United will finish third, the rest some way behind. Falkirk, for all their fighting spirit since Pressley took over have left it too late, to be replaced by any one of three, maybe four teams.
The real excitement - if not the quality - is to be found in the lower divisions, and the possibility of an all First Division Scottish Cup final ever is an indication that there's more to Scottish football than meets the eye.
Against that backdrop, it is a shame that our top two teams continue to take the limelight, though not always in a positive way.
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