The so-called “Green Line” was money Friday for Hill-Murray.

Emily Pohl had two goals and two assists, Jaycee Chatleain had two goals and one assist, and Hill-Murray beat Rosemount 5-2 in a state Class 2A girls hockey semifinal at the Xcel Energy Center. Eliana Engelhardt also scored.

The trio’s performance and those of their teammates mean the Pioneers have a chance to win the tournament for the first time in a decade.

Winners of 11 straight, the No. 3 Pioneers (24-6-0) will face top-seeded Edina in Saturday’s 7 p.m. championship tilt. Edina beat Hill-Murray 2-0 in last year’s final.

The Pioneers seek their third school title. Hill-Murray went back-to-back in 2014-15.

The Pohl-Chatleain-Engelhardt trio was put back together after Christmas and coach John Pohl said they struggled for a few games while the other lines played well.

“Now in the last three weeks they’ve been playing phenomenal,” Pohl said. “They are dynamic. They are probably as good as any line. But our other two lines have been very, very good too. They just haven’t been able to bury it. We keep telling them, ‘It’s gonna come, it’s gonna come.’

“Hopefully it will tomorrow.”

And Pohl would “1,000%” take his defense against any defense in the state.

Piper Tam, an eighth-grade goalie, has a 1.49 goals-against average after making 17 saves Friday.

“They are an insane team. They challenged us in every single part of the game,” said Rosemount’s Sophie Stramel, a Ms. Hockey finalist.

Audrey Boll and Annalee Holzer scored for the Irish (22-8-0). Goaltender Gianna Marchese finished with 43 saves, two shy of her career high that was set in a 6-0 loss to the Pioneers on Dec. 10.

Marchese had 37 saves in Thursday’s quarterfinal when the seventh-seeded Irish beat No. 2 Centennial/Spring Lake Park 3-2.

Her performance continued to give Rosemount a chance, an opportunity that got a boost 65 seconds into the third period when Boll scored on a rebound to get the upset-minded Irish within 2-1.

But Chatleain made it 3-1 for Hill-Murray six minutes later with a quick shot. Emily Pohl drove to the middle, and when three defenders converged, the puck squirted to Chatleain alone near the side of the net.

Emily Pohl added her second with 3:07 to play, a three-goal lead that didn’t last a minute because, with the extra attacker, Holzer tipped a shot into the Hill-Murray net. Chatleain iced the game with a goal in the final minute.

“They just wouldn’t let us knock them out,” said John Pohl. “Rosemount never gave up, played incredibly hard and made us earn every single bit of it.”

The Irish struggled with the Pioneers speed, especially early.

“We knew we had to eliminate them in the corners and do our best kind of man-on-man down low. Sometimes we were successful, other times we weren’t,” said Irish co-coach Jennifer Williams.

The game’s first goal was a prime example.

Sprinting from near the red line to keep the puck in the Rosemount zone just before it came out by the Irish bench, Emily Pohl kept her speed down the right wall untouched, cut across untouched, and tucked the puck behind Marchese.

But the Rosemount goalie stopped Chatleain, who was alone down the slot after a Pohl pass, a couple minutes later.

The Irish appeared to tie the game 33 seconds into the second period on a redirect by Holzer, but, after video review, Rosemount was found to be offsides entering the zone.

Fifteen of the first 16 shots in the second came from a Hill-Murray player, including Engelhardt’s rebound goal off a scramble in front at 4:21 for a 2-0 lead.