Shay Logan is unequivocal; he'd love a final day Premiership decider against Celtic.

Such a wish, of course, would necessitate the Hoops slipping-up in their campaign and for Logan's Aberdeen to continue their remarkable run which has seen them cling close to the Hoops, which they hope will introduce a level of pressure for the Ronny Deila's side to falter.

The Dons full-back is no stranger to having to go to the wire in an effort to enjoy success. Two years ago, as a Brentford player, he and his team-mates fell at the final hurdle as they attempted to win promotion from League One, only to see their dreams dashed on a last-day clash with Doncaster Rovers.

"We can't worry about Celtic," he said. "They have a good squad, but so do we. We know it's in their hands but we have to play them again. There are ten games still to play; anything can happen. We aren't going away. Everyone wants Celtic to slip-up but we'll just focus on ourselves."

Logan's mind flipped back to that League One promotion game two years ago and admitted that "I love all that stuff" as he hoped to help Aberdeen be on level terms with Celtic come the final day of the season which will be at Pittodrie, though as yet against unspecified opponents.

"You want the crowds cheering and booing," he said. "I like all of that.

"If we beat Dundee on Saturday it will keep the pressure on Celtic.

"We're three points behind them having lost to them three times but if you saw those games we could easily have won them.

"I know people will point to the recent 4-0 loss to them but I don't there was all that much between us.

"The important thing is that we're still up there in the table and their defeat to St Johnstone means we're not far behind.

"The still have to come to Pittodrie, so anything can happen.

"We just need to do what we have to do.

"If we did have a final-day decider against Celtic the atmosphere would be amazing and, hopefully, they'll slip-up before then."

Dundee, meanwhile, have proved stuffy opponents for the Reds this season, a fact which has not by-passed Logan, though he opted for a more positive slant to the tussles between the sides and in particular their last meeting, a 3-3 draw at Pittodrie in January when he and his colleagues fought back from being 3-1 down.

Aberdeen had recorded eight successive clean sheet up to that point.

"We were on a really good run," he recalled "but they scored three goals and we were trailing by two goals with just a few minutes to go. It shows how good we are mentally and physically to fight back and get a draw in the circumstances.

"If the game had gone another five minutes we would have gone on to win it. I was shocked that we were so far behind that day but all that matters at the end is the result."

It was Paul Hartley's men brought Aberdeen's William Hill Scottish Cup run to an end earlier this season, a tie that also left Logan stunned.

"I couldn't believe we were going off the pitch having been knocked-out of the competition. Everything is about winning and everyone at the club hates losing which comes from two great leaders, Derek McInnes and his assistant, Tony Docherty."