No. 1 Alabama breaks in youngsters in rout

Alabama took advantage of an opening rout to get plenty of youngsters on the field.
The top-ranked Crimson Tide's top tackler in Saturday night's 48-3 route of San Jose State was freshman linebacker C.J. Mosley. The leading rusher was redshirt freshman Eddie Lacy. Both the kicker and punter were freshmen.
And coach Nick Saban said he had other freshmen ready to go, including No. 3 quarterback Phillip Sims.
Besides the kickers, 13 players made their first college starts for the Tide: seven defenders, two offensive linemen, tailback Trent Richardson and their long snapper.
It was enough to make Saban consider giving his players a refresher course on little things like what to wear on the road.
''It's the first time since we've been here that I have felt the need to talk about things that you take for granted, like the dress code for a trip,'' Saban said. ''We had guys who had been here for two or three years that know what's going on. Now we have a significant number of guys that don't know what's going on, haven't played before and haven't traveled before, that I find myself saying I need to spend some time explaining this stuff that we explained three years ago.''
The road dress code can wait another week. The Tide (1-0) is preparing to host No. 19 Penn State, coming off a 44-14 win over Youngstown State, in what will surely be a more telling game for the youngsters.
Saban has had freshmen play key roles in each of his three seasons with Alabama, ranging from Rolando McClain to Julio Jones, Mark Ingram and Richardson. Two opened as starters in both 2007 and 2008, only the second and third time that's happened at Alabama.
Make that four. Punter Cody Mandell and kicker Cade Foster both started in their first college games. Both had nice debuts and answered a couple of the team's biggest question marks.
Mandell's first two punts each went for 52 yards. Foster made field goals of 41 and 24 yards.
The Tide also started junior college cornerback DeQuan Menzie, six sophomores and a redshirt freshman.
Mosley led Alabama with seven tackles. Starting linebacker Courtney Upshaw sprained his ankle, but Saban said he should be available against Penn State. Redshirt freshman quarterback A.J. McCarron completed 9 of 15 passes for 116 yards and one touchdown.
Richardson got his first start in place of Heisman Trophy winner Ingram, who is out because of a knee injury. Fellow sophomore Damion Square started for defensive end Marcell Dareus, serving a two-game NCAA suspension pending the results of Alabama's appeal.
The defense gave up a 49-yard pass and a 32-yard run, but only 94 yards on the other 46 plays. San Jose State converted only 1 of 13 third downs. Mosley's seven tackles led the team.
''We have a lot of young guys, but they have shown a lot of improvement,'' said sophomore safety Robert Lester, who had an interception and a sack in his first start. ''They have been able to learn the system quickly and go out there and show that. You don't see many freshmen like C.J. Mosley come in and lead the team in tackles like he did and make that many big plays.''
Other freshmen who played included cornerback John Fulton and linebacker Jalston Fowler.
Saban said even more freshmen were ready to go, including Sims in case there's an emergency situation later.
''One of the toughest decisions that you have to make as a coach is if I play a guy in a game like this, he loses a whole year,'' he said. ''So unless he's going to play a significant amount ... then you don't play the guy.
''Phillip is really ready to play and I'd love to play him. You don't have a crystal ball. I'm telling you all in advance that. You can second-guess me for all this if it happens.''