By Bobby Narang
The Nazareth Academy High School baseball team is right on schedule.
After losing several star players who played a key part in leading the Roadrunners to back-to-back Class 3A State championships in 2022 and 2023, the 2025 season was full of question marks.
With one week left in the regular season, the Roadrunners are closing in on the 30-win mark.
Nazareth (26-5 and 11-5) finished in third place in the East Suburban Catholic Conference after sweeping a doubleheader against St. Patrick.
Nazareth veteran coach Lee Milano said the Roadrunners, the No. 2 seed in the Class 4A Burbank Sectional, have endured some ups and downs.
“I’m very pleased where we finished in the conference, especially with a younger group with a couple of veterans,” Milano said. “We have not lost back-to-back games all year and our kids have been very resilient.”
For most of the season, the Roadrunners have been riding the season-long sizzling bats of Jaden Fauske and Landon Thome. Fauske, an LSU recruit was named the co-conference player of the year, is batting .451 with five homers, 32 RBIs, and 28 walks. Thome, a shortstop who was also named to the all-conference team, is hitting .438 with eight homers, 23 RBIs, and a .940 fielding percentage and only committed five errors all season.
“Jaden and Landon have both had MVP type years. Jaden played with 70 professional scouts at one game and is always extremely scrutinized but handles it all well,” Milano said. “Landon is the same way, playing with a last name of a baseball legend. His numbers are eye-popping.”
Nazareth senior pitcher Chase Zidlicky has helped stabilize the staff with his consistency.
The Middlebury College recruit was slated to be the ace of the Roadrunners’ pitching staff following the graduation of standouts David Cox and Lucas Fiore, both Illinois-Chicago recruits.
But injuries to the staff put additional stress on Zidlicky to pitch deeper into games to keep the Roadrunners in several series.
“It put a bit more pressure on me, just knowing they will need me to go deeper into games and that I have to perform well every time I touch the mound,” Zidlicky said.
The right-hander was up to the task, improving to 7-0 on the season after tossing a five-hit complete game and striking out 11 and walking one in a victory over St. Patrick on Saturday. Zidlicky said he prepared for his final season by gaining confidence in all of his pitches.
“One of the main keys for me was figuring out my off-speed pitches and becoming very confident in throwing them in any count,” Zidlicky said.
Zidlicky enters the last week of the regular season with a 1.73 ERA and 69 strikeouts, adding conference wins over Benet, Marian Catholic, and Joliet Catholic to his victory total.
“We asked Chase to do more because two of our top end guys have been out,” Milano said. “Mac McGarry was out for three weeks and Andrew Kouris has been done for the season. Both have not pitched anywhere near the amount of innings we anticipated them to. That put Chase in the number on spot. He’s matured every year. He was timid last year, but made a giant leap this year.
“He listens and works hard and worked smart in the offseason, not trying to overtrain and always pitch game velocity. He’s done all the right things to put himself and his body in a spot to be healthy and to have success.”
Zidlicky, who tossed a six-inning, one-hitter with nine strikeouts against Young in early April, said the Roadrunners are a vastly different team than last year’s 31-win squad.
“This team is different because we have a lot of new varsity players than we’ve had in the past and they have to learn more,” Zidlicky said. “In the past, we had a very good lineup from one to nine and we could put up a ton of runs very quickly. This year we’ve had to rely on pitching more so than usual, but we’ve had a good number of young pitchers step up.”
•A few miles away, Riverside-Brookfield struggled through a crucial stretch of its schedule against high level competition over the last few weeks.
The Bulldogs (18-12 and 10-5 Upstate Eight) lost four in a row to start the month but then defeated Streamwood 6-1 before losing three of their next four games.
Riverside-Brookfield coach Mark Ori said his team will spend the last week fine-tuning a few things to prepare for the playoffs.
“We have to align our pitching staff for the playoffs,” Ori said. “We have had some injuries and a couple of guys step up with productive at-bats, limiting strikeouts and executing small ball.”
The Bulldogs start the Class 4A playoffs as a No. 7 seed in the Burbank Sectional, opening up against No. 10 Oak Lawn in a Nazareth Regional semfinal May 29. The winner will most likely play Nazareth May 31.
Ori said Damian Noa and Michael Kallas are two players who have played at a high level late in the regular season.
“Damian has played a much larger role within our staff,” Ori said. “He has had three to four quality starts in the past month. Michael Kallas has had a few starts in right field in the last week. He had a walk-off hit against Glenbard South last week.”
