Celtic midfielder Kris Commons has insisted that the Parkhead side will knuckle down to league businesses after their Hampden disappointment.

Ronny Deila's side take on Dundee at Dens Park tomorrow night as they seek to take another step towards securing their fourth successive league title and Commons is looking to win all of the club's remaining league games between now and the end of the season.

"We will look to bounce back and put in a good performance," Commons told CelticTV. "We have a league title to win and we want to go and win our remaining fixtures and win it in style.

"This is my fifth season here and every season is a Treble season - we are always in and about it.

"I have had disappointments in the past in semi-finals and finals, but there is one main reason why there are only three teams who have achieved a Treble here; it is so difficult.

"When you are not quite at the races or a team puts you under pressure you need to be able to stand up to that but yet again we have just fell that little bit short but we will be looking to bounce back on Wednesday."

Commons was irked at the first-half controversy on the stroke of the interval that denied Celtic the opportunity to take a 2-0 lead over the Highland side, but conceded that Deila's side should still have had enough about them to see off Inverness.

"I just can't understand how when you have five officials that not one of them can see it," he said, referring to Josh Meekings handball.

"The idea of officials behind the goal is to make it easier for those kind of decisions. So I just find it hard that no-one could see it. But I still think that at 1-0 going into the second-half we should have seen out the game. But credit to Inverness because they worked hard.

"We gave everything and there was nothing more we could have done. Sometimes you give everything and it doesn't work right. It was evident of us working hard, trying to do all the right things but sometimes you fall a little bit short."

Commons had already left the field injured when Inverness scored the winning goal but he was preparing himself to take in the lottery of penalties.

"It is always difficult going down to ten men," he said. "Obviously we were getting tired and chances were few and far between, but I thought we were in a good position to go to penalties.

"I'd have taken that given that we had gone down to ten men so early in the second-half.

"It was disappointing not to win the game. I thought we had done enough.

"A few things didn't go our way on the park but credit to Inverness they worked hard, they put us under pressure and they scored three goals against us so they were always going to have a chance."