Tag Archives: Desmond

Skull Session: Desmond Howard is At It Again, Michigan and Notre Dame’s Message Boards Were Locked Into Ohio S – Eleven Warriors

  1. Skull Session: Desmond Howard is At It Again, Michigan and Notre Dame’s Message Boards Were Locked Into Ohio S Eleven Warriors
  2. Ohio State Buckeyes Football Post Spring Depth Chart Projection Sports Illustrated
  3. After attending spring game Ohio State legacy sack machine says he will return for an OV 247Sports
  4. Five answers from Ohio State football’s spring, and five questions for the offseason cleveland.com
  5. Reggie Powers, Ryan Montgomery, Deontae Armstrong and More Recruits Share Their Reactions to Attending Ohio St Eleven Warriors
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Five-star CB Desmond Ricks announces top 3 schools, sets commitment date

Five-star cornerback Desmond Ricks from IMG Academy released his top three schools on Thursday. The Chesapeake, Virginia native revealed he would choose Alabama, Florida, and LSU.

The 6-foot-2, 180-pounder will announce his final decision on Dec. 23.

Ricks recently reclassified for the 2023 recruiting class and is currently the No. 2 cornerback and the No. 5 prospect in Florida. While he was a member of the 2024 class, Ricks was the No. 2 player in the country and the No. 1 cornerback.

The cornerback will take an unofficial visit to Baton Rouge to watch the Alabama-LSU game.

For more information on Ricks and other prospects that Alabama is currently recruiting, click here.

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Jets vs. Falcons score, takeaways: Marcus Mariota, Desmond Ridder sharp for Atlanta in defeat

The New York Jets topped the Atlanta Falcons, 24-16, in the final game of preseason Week 2. 

Atlanta took a 16-0 lead in the first half behind efficient performances from both Marcus Mariota (6 of 10 for 132 yards and a touchdown) and Desmond Ridder (10 of 13 for 143 yards), but New York rallied for a late-second-quarter field goal drive and then staged a post-halftime comeback once the deep backups entered the game.

The Jets got their touchdowns courtesy of wide receiver Lawrence Cager on a 34-yard crossing route, running back La’Mical Perine on a seven-yard run that he bounced to the edge out of a crowded box, and edge rusher Bradlee Anae on a fumble recovery that he took to the house to give New York the lead for good. Atlanta had one last chance to tie the game toward the end of the fourth quarter, but Felipe Franks’ pass sailed over the head of tight end Anthony Firkser and went out of bounds. 

Why the Jets won

Well, mostly because their third-string offense found a way to move the ball, and Atlanta’s did not. It began with a drive late in the first half, on which Denzel Mims made the big play to get the team into field goal range. After halftime, Chris Streveler made some plays with his arm and his legs, including a touchdown toss to Cager and multiple scrambles that kept drives alive. Meanwhile, New York’s defense held Franks to just 2 of 6 passing for eight yards after giving up 275 yards to Mariota and Ridder on just 23 attempts. 

Why the Falcons lost

Franks and the third-string offense got completely shut down by the Jets defense, while Streveler was able to find some holes in Atlanta’s coverage unit that weren’t available to Mike White for much of the first half. Plus, Atlanta’s offensive line failed to create any rushing lanes for Caleb Huntley, who was repeatedly stopped at or around the line of scrimmage, including on a couple of short-yardage opportunities. Plus, Franks was not accurate when counted on to throw the ball. 

Highlight play

With New York holding a 1-point lead early in the fourth quarter, the Falcons faced a third-and-8 from their own 40-yard line. That’s when Anae made what turned out to be the game-clinching play. 

Anae did an excellent job not biting too hard on Franks’ play-action fake and sticking with the quarterback as he attempted to scramble out to the left side. He dove and got enough of Franks’ legs to get the quarterback to the ground, where his attempt to brace his fall with the football resulted in a fumble. From there, all Anae had to do was pick it up and take it to the end zone himself. 

What’s next

The Jets square off against their MetLife Stadium brethren, the New York Giants, in their final preseason game of the 2022 season. The Jets are technically the home team for that matchup, for whatever that’s worth. They’ll look to improve to 3-0 in their tune-up games before getting ready for the Ravens in Week 1. 

The Falcons host the Jacksonville Jaguars in their final preseason contest. That game will take place Saturday at 3 p.m. They’ll then have a bit more than two weeks to get ready for their season opener against the division rival New Orleans Saints.

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2022 NFL preseason rookie QB roundup: Desmond Ridder, Kenny Pickett, Sam Howell shine; Matt Corral struggles

Week 1 of the preseason always brings excitement with football returning, especially as teams get their first look at the rookies on their roster. This year’s rookie quarterback class wasn’t as strong as in recent years, yet many of the young signal-callers got their first taste of NFL action this weekend. 

Kenny Pickett, the lone quarterback taken in the first round this year, is battling for the starting quarterback job with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Desmond Ridder may be the starter down the line for the Atlanta Falcons, while Matt Corral and Sam Howell wait patiently with the Carolina Panthers and Washington Commanders, respectively.

Although he’s not a rookie, Trey Lance enters the season as the No. 1 quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers. Given how little Lance has played over the past two seasons (one in college and one in the NFL), let’s group Lance with the rookie signal-callers for this experiment. 

Below is a roundup of how all the rookie quarterbacks fared — with a special exception given to Lance — this weekend. 

Trey Lance (San Francisco 49ers, second year)

Playing just 11 snaps was enough for 49ers fans to get a glimpse of what Lance brings to the offense, as he completed 4 of 5 passes for 92 yards and a touchdown. Lance threw a perfect deep pass to Danny Gray for a 76-yard score to cap off his night, giving the 49ers a 10-7 lead when he left the field.

Lance finished with a perfect passer rating of 158.3 in his debut as the No. 1 quarterback, with the 49ers scoring on both of his possessions. The 49ers don’t have plans to play Lance next week, so this may be it for him this preseason.

Not a bad cameo appearance. 

Kenny Pickett (Pittsburgh Steelers)

What an impressive performance from Pickett, who took over in the second half of his debut for the Steelers. Battling for the starting quarterback job, Pickett entered the game after Mitchell Trubisky and Mason Rudolph but finished 13 of 15 for 95 yards with two touchdowns and zero interceptions (132.6 rating). 

Pickett threw the game-winning touchdown pass to Tyler Vaughns with three seconds left to give Pittsburgh a 32-25 victory over Seattle. The pass went for 24 yards, as Vaughns used his yards-after-the-catch ability to find the end zone. 

Perhaps Pickett moves up the depth chart next week.

Willis showed flashes in his Titans’ debut, finishing 6 for 11 for 107 yards (88.1 rating) with a rushing touchdown in his two and a half quarters of action. Also having five carries for 38 yards, Willis showcased his dual-threat ability at quarterback — but ran a bit too much for Mike Vrabel’s liking.

The Tennessee head coach took Willis out of the game midway through a drive in the third quarter because he wanted his quarterback to throw the ball. 

“He needs to try to throw the ball when guys are open,” Vrabel said. “Be more decisive, so we’ll evaluate that and see if there is a timing issue or what’s going on. I wanted to get him out there and see how he responded. He did okay. There were some good plays. Obviously, some plays that we will have to look at the timing on the release and if we are making the right decisions.”

Desmond Ridder (Atlanta Falcons)

Ridder arguably had the top performance of all the rookie quarterbacks in Week 1, even though the third-round pick from Cincinnati won’t be winning the starting job in Atlanta. He made a great first impression, finishing 10 of 22 for 103 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions (89.8 rating) while also leading the Falcons with six carries for 59 yards. 

In addition to his strong play, Ridder threw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Jared Bernhardt on fourth-and-9 with 1:30 remaining to give the Falcons a 27-23 victory over the Detroit Lions. Perhaps head coach Arthur Smith might have something to think about with his starting quarterback in the coming weeks if Ridder keeps up his strong play.

Howell had an impressive debut for Washington, finishing 9 of 16 for 145 yards (86.7 rating) while also rushing for two touchdowns (three carries for 19 yards). He juked a few defenders on his 17-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter and also scored on a 1-yard run to put Washington up a point with 2:26 to play. 

Howell is listed as the No. 3 quarterback behind Carson Wentz and Taylor Heinicke, but the fifth-round pick showed flashes why he was considered a top-10 pick a year ago at this time.

The third-round pick from Mississippi went 1 of 9 for 11 yards for Carolina, yet led the Panthers on the scoring drive that resulted in Zane Gonzalez’s 45-yard field goal in the final minute. Corral is the No. 3 quarterback behind Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold as the pair battle for a starting job. 

No matter how the play-calling duties were split, Zappe had an impressive showing for the Patriots in his debut. His 20-yard touchdown pass to Lil’Jordan Humphrey gave New England a 21-20 lead in the fourth quarter against the New York Giants — serving as the highlight of a 19 for 32 showing. 

Zappe entered the game midway through the second quarter and threw for 205 yards with a touchdown and an interception (75.6 rating). The Patriots scored two touchdowns on his eight possessions.

An undrafted free agent signing with the Ravens, Brown entered the game in the second half of Baltimore’s 23-10 victory over Tennessee. Brown finished 10 of 15 for 117 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions (90.1 rating), leading the Ravens to field goals on all three of his possessions. 

With Lamar Jackson not playing the preseason opener, Brown relieved Tyler Huntley to open the second half. He’s battling for the No. 3 quarterback job with Brett Hundley. 

An undrafted free agent, the former Washington State quarterback went 7 of 10 for 54 yards and a touchdown in the fourth quarter for the Cardinals. Guarantano also had four carries for 10 yards in the win. 

Guarantano played the second half and led the Cardinals on two touchdown drives. He’s the fourth quarterback on Arizona’s depth chart. 

A undrafted free agent rookie for the Bengals, Plitt led Cincinnati on an impressive 11-play, 94-yard drive in his lone series late in the fourth quarter. He capped the drive with a 25-yard touchdown pass to Kendric Pryor, finishing the night 6 of 6 for 76 yards with a perfect passer rating of 158.3. 

Plitt is currently the fourth-string quarterback on the Bengals depth chart, but may have played his way into consideration for the No. 3 job. 

The seventh-round draft pick from Iowa State finished 3 of 6 for 36 yards and a touchdown (106.6 rating) in his lone series for the 49ers. With Jimmy Garoppolo on the trading block, Purdy has an opportunity to make the roster as the No. 3 quarterback — which was what he was listed as in Week 1 of the preseason. 

Crum finished 6 of 11 for 18 yards (60.0 rating), entering the game midway through the third quarter for Kansas City. The former Kent State quarterback was an undrafted free agent signing by the Chiefs, yet is a long shot to make the roster right now as the No. 4 quarterback. 

Coan finished 1 of 5 for 0 yards in mop-up duty for Indianapolis. The undrafted free agent from Wisconsin and Notre Dame is the fourth quarterback on the depth chart, behind Sam Ehlinger for the No. 3 job. 

Thompson played the full game for the Dolphins, finishing 20 of 28 for 218 yards and a touchdown in the 26-24 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The seventh-round pick hit Lynn Bowden on a 22-yard pass in the second quarter for the score. 

The No. 3 quarterback got a good look in the preseason opener. 

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NFL preseason Week 1 scores, highlights, updates: Rookies Kenny Pickett, Desmond Ridder throw game-winning TDs

The NFL preseason is officially underway, and Week 1 of the 2022 exhibition season has been quite eventful up to this point. Atlanta Falcons rookie quarterback Desmond Ridder threw a game-winning touchdown against the Detroit Lions with under two minutes left, Jordan Love and Trey Lance traded long touchdowns in the Bay and Cincinnati Bengals star kicker Evan McPherson went 3 of 3 on his field goals, including two from at least 56 yards out.

There were also a couple of injuries, the most notable being New York Jets quarterback Zach Wilson — who tore his meniscus. However, he’s expected to be OK, and may not miss any time in the regular season.

This Saturday, we have a total of eight games to watch, starting with the Carolina Panthers vs. Washington Commanders and Kansas City Chiefs vs. Chicago Bears at 1 p.m. ET, and ending with a battle for L.A. between the Super Bowl champion Rams and Chargers. 

Below, we will track all the must-see highlights from Saturday’s action. Get ready for a full day of football.

Schedule

Thursday

Giants 23, Patriots 21 (Takeaways)
Ravens 23, Titans 10 (Recap)

Friday

Falcons 27, Lions 23 (Recap)
Browns 24, Jaguars 13 (Recap)
Cardinals 36, Bengals 23 (Recap)
Jets 24, Eagles 21 (Takeaways)
49ers 28, Packers 21 (Recap)

Saturday

Bears 19, Chiefs 14 (Recap)
Panthers 23, Commanders 21 (Recap)
Bills 27, Colts 24 (Recap)
Steelers 32, Seahawks 25 (Takeaways)
Dolphins 26, Buccaneers 24 (Box score)
Texans 17, Saints 13 (Box score)
Broncos 17, Cowboys 0 (Halftime – Gametracker)
Rams 14, Chargers 7 (2nd quarter – Gametracker)

Sunday

Vikings at Raiders, 4:25 p.m. ET (Gametracker) 

Chargers DB gets Moss’d

Montana State rookie wideout Lance McCutcheon announced himself to Los Angeles on Saturday night when he snatched the ball out of the air over one Chargers defender and then shed two tacklers on his way for a 60-yard score for the Rams. That’ll go down as one of the more impressive touchdowns of the preseason.

Pickett walks it off! 

Two days, two rookie quarterbacks with game-winning touchdown passes. On Friday, it was Desmond Ridder getting it done against the Lions with fewer than two minutes to play. Pickett then one-upped Ridder on Saturday, connecting with Tyler Vaughns, who stepped out of a tackle and then dove for the front-left pylon with just three seconds to play. 

It was a memorable debut for the first-round pick, who went 13-for-15 passing for 95 yards and a pair of scores. Mitchell Trubisky still has the inside track to be the Steelers’ Week 1 starter, but Pittsburgh has to be happy with its top draft pick in his NFL debut.

Drew Lock impressing 

Geno Smith accounted for one touchdown in the first half, while Lock has thrown for two touchdowns in a little over a quarter. He’s completed eight of his first 11 throws for 102 yards and passing scores to Dareke Young and DeeJay Dallas.

Pittsburgh was eager to welcome its first-round quarterback Kenny Pickett on Saturday, meeting him with thunderous applause as he took the field to begin the second half on offense for the Steelers. Pickett rewarded those in attendance with an impressive 75-yard touchdown drive where he completed all five of his passes for 33 yards and a touchdown to Jaylen Warren. He also completed a pass to Connor Heyward for the two-point conversion.

While this may have been in the second half of a preseason game, you can’t ask for much more from Pickett, who looked pretty sharpe out of the gate. 

Leg interception!

Why use your hands to force a turnover when you can use your legs? That’s exactly what Elijah Campbell did in the second quarter against the Buccaneers. The Dolphins scored a touchdown on the next play.

Dolphins rookie slings TD

With Tua Tagovailoa among the starters sitting out, seventh-round rookie Skylar Thompson began the game under center and has taken full advantage of his opportunity. He started the game by completing 10 of his first 12 passes, with the highlight being a 22-yard strike to Lynn Bowden Jr. The Dolphins have reportedly had trade talks about Bowden and Preston Williams, but the former showed Miami what he could do on that play.

Geno Smith is currently ahead of Drew Lock in the battle for the Seahawks’ starting quarterback job, and the veteran has been solid through one half against the Steelers in the preseason opener. He finished the first two quarters 10-for-15 passing for 101 yards and added a two-yard touchdown run to pull Seattle within a score before the break.

George Pickens hauls in toe-tapping touchdown

The George Pickens hype train is about to go supersonic. After turning heads over the course of training camp, the Steelers’ second-round pick is now showing the entire NFL what he brings to the table. 

In Pittsburgh’s preseason opener against Seattle, the rookie wideout hauled in an eye-popping touchdown catch from Mason Rudolph. On a third-and-13 attempt from the Seattle 26-yard line, Rudolph uncorked a pass towards the back-right pylon in the end zone. Pickens was not only able to get a step on his defender, but was also able to keep both feet in bounds after making the catch. 

Ho-hum, just another budding star receiver coming out of Pittsburgh. 

‘Punt God’ boots 82-yarder

They don’t call him “Punt God” for nothing. In the closing minute of the first half of the Bills and Colts’ preseason opener, rookie punter Matt Araiza booted a thunderous 82-yard punt. It bounced deep into Indy territory before going into the end zone for a touchback. Araiza’s punt had an unofficial hang time of 4.23 seconds, according to The Athletic. 

The San Diego State product made a name for himself in college for punts similar to this, and that’s what led to him being a sixth-round pick for Buffalo in the 2022 NFL Draft. If he can continue to have punts like this and force teams to travel the length of the field against a defense that ranked No. 1 in DVOA the NFL last year, Buffalo is going to be even more dangerous than initially thought. 

Turnover-fest in Buffalo

The Buffalo Bills and Indianapolis Colts are the current betting favorites to come out of their respective divisions and are among the more popular wagers to win the AFC in 2022. That said, they didn’t exactly look like juggernauts in the first half of their preseason opener. This exhibition quickly turned into a turnover-fest. Over the first two quarters, there has been a total of six turnovers, which includes a back-and-fourth of four-straight in the second quarter. 

After stopping a fourh-and-4 attempt by the Colts, quarterback Case Keenum was stripped near midfield. Just six plays later, Indy signal-caller Nick Foles was stripped with Buffalo’s Terrel Bernard recovering the loose ball and returning it 69 yards for the touchdown. 

On the very next drive following that score, Foles’ throw was intercepted. A play later, the turnover train continued to chug as Keenum was picked in the red zone. 

Sam Howell’s eye-popping late rally 

Carson Wentz and Taylor Heinicke didn’t do much at quarterback for the Commanders, but their third QB in rookie Sam Howell impressed. It took him just five passing completions to become Washington’s leading passer vs. his hometown Panthers, and then he recorded this impressive 17-yard rushing touchdown.

Don’t be caught off guard by Howell’s legs. He ran in 11 scores for the Tar Heels last year.

After Carolina went three-and-out on the next possession, Howell again took the field — looking to at least tie the game halfway through the fourth quarter. The rook led a 13-play, 67-yard drive which was capped with his second rushing touchdown of the game. Howell then hit Alex Erickson for the two-point conversion to take the lead, and the fans at FedEx Field went nuts.

Siemian splash plays

Justin Fields’ new mentor is leading a comeback in Chicago. Once down 14-0, the Bears have scored 16 unanswered thanks to backup quarterback Trevor Siemian. Chicago isn’t acting like this is a preseason game, as the offense went for it on fourth-and-2, and Siemian found a streaking Dante Pettis down the field.

Three plays later, Siemian hit Dazz Newsome on a nice throw in the corner of the end zone to pull within one point of the Chiefs. 

Safety Justin Reid kicks XP for Chiefs

Harrison Butker isn’t the only good kicker on the Chiefs’ roster, as one of their safeties has a talented leg as well. Reid kicked a 65-yard field goal in training camp last week, and got a shot to kick an extra point in Week 1 of the preseason. It was perfect. 

Rookie RB Brian Robinson shining for Commanders

It looks like the rookie out of Alabama is poised to take some touches away from Antonio Gibson in 2022. Robinson rushed for 26 yards on his first six carries, and caught two passes for 15 yards early as well. Robinson also recorded some Commander history, as he scored the first touchdown of the new era in Washington.

Tajae Sharpe a ‘catch of the preseason’ candidate

Sharpe is battling for playing time among the Bears’ wide receivers, and this catch certainly will help his case. He used athleticism, concentration and sideline awareness to reel this one in. A new member of the Bears, Sharpe spent last year with the Falcons. He caught 25 passes for 230 yards in 15 games played. 

Sam Darnold with impressive TD toss

The Panthers are all over the Commanders early, and Antonio Gibson helped his opponent’s cause by fumbling at his own 28-yard line. Darnold replaced Baker Mayfield at quarterback for Carolina’s second series, and three plays into the drive, he connected with Rashard Higgins for an eight-yard touchdown.

This is a pretty impressive throw, as Darnold had Montez Sweat in his face, yet perfectly led his wideout while throwing off his back foot.

The NFL world is a bit nervous for the second-year Fields, as he’s been charged with finding success behind a questionable offensive line and with a wide receiving corps not many are high on. Fields still has Mooney, however, who is coming off of a career campaign in which he caught 81 passes for 1,055 yards and four touchdowns. 

Check out this throw and catch that went for 26 yards:

Chiefs waste no time scoring first Saturday TD

Alright, that’s enough. We can take Patrick Mahomes out of the game. He’s still good at football. The former NFL MVP led an 11-play, 72-yard drive that included a couple highlight-reel plays, and was capped with a five-yard touchdown pass to Blake Bell.

Watson is awaiting a potential increase in punishment from the NFL — who is expected to up his six-game suspension to something more significant — but he took the field for the Browns’ first preseason game of the new year against the Jaguars. Watson certainly looked like someone who was playing his first game in 568 days, as he finished with just seven passing yards on 1 of 5 passing.

In positive news for the Browns, backup QB Joshua Dobbs looked good, completing 10 of 13 passes for 108 yards and a touchdown. 

From Friday: Ridder’s clutch game-winning pass

The Lions-Falcons preseason game had no business being this entertaining. The new QB in the ATL, Marcus Mariota, looked great, and so did the rookie Desmond Ridder. On fourth-and-9 down three points with under two minutes remaining, Ridder found Jared Bernhardt for the game-winning score.

Not only was this play good to see from a rookie quarterback, but the player on the receiving end of the touchdown deserves some credit as well. Bernhardt is a former Maryland lacrosse star and the 2021 Tewaaraton Award winner — which is given to the best player in college lacrosse. Not only was Bernhardt a lax legend at an elite school, but he then transferred to Ferris State to play football, and led the program to an undefeated record and their first Division II national championship as a quarterback. Now, he’s caught a game-winning touchdown in the NFL. What a story.

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Aquamation: The green alternative to cremation chosen by Desmond Tutu

At his request, the Nobel Peace Prize winner’s body underwent aquamation — considered to be a greener alternative to cremation — South Africa’s Anglican Church confirmed to CNN on Saturday.

Aquamation is a water-based process whose scientific name is “alkaline hydrolysis”, in which a “combination of gentle water flow, temperature, and alkalinity are used to accelerate the breakdown of organic materials” when a body is laid to rest in soil, according to Bio-Response Solutions, a US company which specializes in the process.

The company’s website says the process “uses 90% less energy than flame cremation and does not emit any harmful greenhouse gases.”

According to the Cremation Association of North America (CANA), an international non-profit organization, alkaline hydrolysis is sometimes referred to as flameless cremation.

The body is placed in an alkaline hydrolysis machine, comprised of an airtight chamber filled with a solution made of water and alkaline chemicals. The chamber is then heated, liquifying the body and leaving only bone behind, according to CANA’s website.

Once the bones are dried they can be pulverized. “The process results in approximately 32% more cremated remains than flame-based cremation and may require a larger urn,” according to CANA.

Tutu was passionate about protecting the environment — he gave many speeches and wrote many articles about the need to act to tackle the climate crisis. In 2007, he wrote a piece titled “This Fatal Complacency” for the Guardian in which he addressed the worrying impact that climate change was having in the Global South and on poor communities, as much of North America and Europe was yet to face extreme weather conditions caused by the climate emergency at this time.

As well as requesting an eco-friendly alternative to cremation for his body, Tutu also took other steps to ensure his funeral would be as modest as his lifestyle was — his body laid in state in a simple pine coffin, which was the “cheapest available” at his request, his foundations said.

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Aquamation: The green alternative to cremation chosen by Desmond Tutu

At his request, the Nobel Peace Prize winner’s body underwent aquamation — considered to be a greener alternative to cremation — South Africa’s Anglican Church confirmed to CNN on Saturday.

Aquamation is a water-based process whose scientific name is “alkaline hydrolysis”, in which a “combination of gentle water flow, temperature, and alkalinity are used to accelerate the breakdown of organic materials” when a body is laid to rest in soil, according to Bio-Response Solutions, a US company which specializes in the process.

The company’s website says the process “uses 90% less energy than flame cremation and does not emit any harmful greenhouse gases.”

According to the Cremation Association of North America (CANA), an international non-profit organization, alkaline hydrolysis is sometimes referred to as flameless cremation.

The body is placed in an alkaline hydrolysis machine, comprised of an airtight chamber filled with a solution made of water and alkaline chemicals. The chamber is then heated, liquifying the body and leaving only bone behind, according to CANA’s website.

Once the bones are dried they can be pulverized. “The process results in approximately 32% more cremated remains than flame-based cremation and may require a larger urn,” according to CANA.

Tutu was passionate about protecting the environment — he gave many speeches and wrote many articles about the need to act to tackle the climate crisis. In 2007, he wrote a piece titled “This Fatal Complacency” for the Guardian in which he addressed the worrying impact that climate change was having in the Global South and on poor communities, as much of North America and Europe was yet to face extreme weather conditions caused by the climate emergency at this time.

As well as requesting an eco-friendly alternative to cremation for his body, Tutu also took other steps to ensure his funeral would be as modest as his lifestyle was — his body laid in state in a simple pine coffin, which was the “cheapest available” at his request, his foundations said.

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What is aquamation? The process behind Desmond Tutu’s ‘green cremation’ | Desmond Tutu

The body of Archbishop Desmond Tutu will undergo aquamation, an increasingly popular and environmentally friendly alternative to traditional cremation methods, using water instead of fire.

With aquamation, or “alkaline hydrolysis”, the body of the deceased is immersed for three to four hours in a mixture of water and a strong alkali, such as potassium hydroxide, in a pressurised metal cylinder and heated to around 150C.

The process liquifies everything except for the bones, which are then dried in an oven and reduced to white dust, placed in an urn and handed to relatives.

Like human composting, a technique of composting bodies with layers of organic material like leaves or wood chips, aquamation is still authorised only in certain countries. In South Africa, where Tutu died last Sunday, no legislation at all governs the practice.

First developed in the early 1990s as a way to discard the bodies of animals used in experiments, the method was then used to dispose of cattle during the mad cow disease epidemic, said US-based researcher Philip R Olson.

In the 2000s, US medical schools used aquamation to dispose of donated human cadavers, before the practice made its way into the funeral industry, Olson wrote in a 2014 paper.

Tutu, who died on Boxing Day aged 90, was known for his modest lifestyle. He left instructions that his funeral ceremony should be simple and without frills.

The anti-apartheid hero, whose funeral was held on Saturday, specifically asked for a cheap coffin and an eco-friendly cremation.

With burial space in urban areas worldwide becoming increasingly scarce and expensive, aquamation has obvious attractions. Its advocates say water is a gentler way to go than flames.

They also claim a liquid cremation consumes less energy than a conventional one, and emits less greenhouse gases.

According to UK-based firm Resomation, aquamation uses five times less energy than fire, and reduces a funeral’s emissions of greenhouse gases by about 35%.

Aquamation is also used to dispose of animal carcasses in slaughterhouses, where it is considered to be more efficient and hygienic.

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Desmond Tutu laid to rest at state funeral in South Africa

Tutu died last Sunday at the age of 90, sparking a global outpouring of tributes to the anti-apartheid hero. He had been in poor health for several years.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who delivered the main eulogy during the service at St. George’s Cathedral on Saturday, hailed Tutu as “our national conscience.” Tutu’s widow Nomalizo Leah, known as “Mama Leah,” sat in a wheelchair in the front row of the congregation, draped in a purple scarf, the color of her husband’s clerical robes.

For decades, Tutu was one of the primary voices pushing the South African government to end apartheid, the country’s official policy of racial segregation and White minority rule. He won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, before apartheid ended in the early 1990s and the long-imprisoned Nelson Mandela became the nation’s first Black president.

The revered anti-apartheid fighter will be remembered as one of the most important voices of the 20th century. However, his funeral was subdued: Before he died, Tutu asked for a simple service and the cheapest available coffin, according to two of his foundations. Tutu’s funeral was limited to just 100 people, in line with current Covid-19 regulations.

In his address at St. George’s Cathedral, a church famous for its role in the resistance against apartheid, Ramaphosa described Tutu as “a man with a faith as deep as it was abiding,” and “a crusader in the struggle for freedom, for justice, for equality and for peace, not just in South Africa, the country of his birth, but around the world as well.”

“Archbishop Desmond Tutu has been our moral compass and national conscience,” Ramaphosa said. “He saw our country as a ‘rainbow nation’, emerging from the shadow of apartheid, united in its diversity, with freedom and equal rights for all.”

“He embraced all who had ever felt the cold wind of exclusion and they in turn embraced him,” Ramaphosa added, praising Tutu’s advocacy for LGBTQ rights, campaigning against child marriage, and support for the Palestinian cause.

“His was a life lived honestly and completely. He has left the world a better place. We remember him with a smile,” Ramaphosa said.

Tutu’s daughter Naomi also paid tribute to her father and thanked the public for their prayers. “Thank you, daddy, for the many ways you showed us love, for the many times you challenged us, for the many times you comforted us,” she said.

Reverend Michael Nuttall, the retired Bishop of Natal who was once Tutu’s deputy, delivered the main sermon, calling Tutu a “giant among us morally and spiritually.”

His voice breaking at times, Nuttal said being Tutu’s deputy between 1989 and 1996 “struck a chord perhaps in the hearts and minds of many people: a dynamic Black leader and his White deputy in the dying years of apartheid; and hey presto, the heavens did not collapse. We were a foretaste, if you like, of what could be in our wayward, divided nation.”

In a video message played at the ceremony, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, said an Archbishop of Canterbury giving a tribute to Archbishop Tutu was “like a mouse giving a tribute to an elephant.”

Tutu’s body will be cremated in a private ceremony after Saturday’s requiem mass and will then be interred behind the pulpit at the cathedral.

Events were planned throughout the country to give South Africans the opportunity to collectively mourn ‘”the Arch,” as he was known, while still practicing social distancing.

A week-long remembrance began Monday with the ringing of the bells at St. George’s Cathedral, which held a special place in the late archbishop’s heart, so much so that he requested his ashes be interred there in a special repository.

On Wednesday, several religious leaders gathered outside Tutu’s former home on Vilakazi Street — where his friend and ally Nelson Mandela also grew up — in Soweto, a township in Johannesburg, for a series of events. Another memorial service was held Wednesday in Cape Town, and Tutu’s wife, Nomalizo Leah Tutu, met with friends of the late archbishop on Thursday for an “intimate” gathering.
South Africans also paid their respects before Tutu’s plain pine coffin on Thursday and Friday as it lay in state at the cathedral.

Tutu was born October 7, 1931, in Klerksdorp, a town in South Africa’s Transvaal province, the son of a teacher and a domestic worker. Tutu had plans to become a doctor, partly thanks to a boyhood bout of tuberculosis, which put him in the hospital for more than a year, and even qualified for medical school, he said.

But his parents couldn’t afford the fees, so he turned to teaching.

“The government was giving scholarships for people who wanted to become teachers,” he told the Academy of Achievement. “I became a teacher and I haven’t regretted that.”

However, he was horrified at the state of Black South African schools, and even more horrified when the Bantu Education Act was passed in 1953 that racially segregated the nation’s education system. He resigned in protest. Not long after, the Bishop of Johannesburg agreed to accept him for the priesthood — Tutu believed it was because he was a Black man with a university education, a rarity in the 1950s — and took up his new vocation.  

He was ordained in 1960 and spent the ’60s and early ’70s alternating between London and South Africa. He returned to his home country for good in 1975, when he was appointed dean of St. Mary’s Cathedral in Johannesburg. As the government became increasingly oppressive — detaining Black people, establishing onerous laws — Tutu became increasingly outspoken.

CNN’s Larry Madowo, Chandler Thornton, Allegra Goodwin and Niamh Kennedy contributed reporting.

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Even in Retirement, Desmond Tutu Remained South Africa’s Moral Compass

Long after he led the nonviolent struggle against apartheid, Archbishop Desmond M. Tutu, who died Sunday at 90, continued to serve as South Africa’s moral compass, even if it meant criticizing two institutions central to his life: his church and the former liberation movement.

Though he formally retired from public life in 2010 — promising to quietly sip tea with his wife and visit his grandchildren — Archbishop Tutu remained a powerful advocate for what he saw as right and fair, including a host of causes like social and climate justice.

He also stood against corruption and lack of accountability under the African National Congress, and against discrimination, calling out the Anglican Church for not taking a stronger stance for gay rights.

“If God, as they say, is homophobic, I wouldn’t worship that God,” he told the BBC in 2007 after the election of the first openly gay Episcopal bishop in the United States led the Anglican Church to grapple with the issue.

Gay rights later became a personal cause for Archbishop Tutu.

When his daughter Mpho Tutu, an Anglican priest, married a woman, her longtime partner, Marceline van Furth, in 2015, he was publicly supportive. When their marriage led the church to revoke her license, and to her leaving the priesthood, he also supported her choice.

Still, Archbishop Tutu remained loyal to the church, said Dr. Mamphela Ramphele, a former anti-apartheid activist who spoke on Sunday on behalf of the family.

Although he was saddened by the church’s rules, Dr. Ramphele said, Archbishop Tutu followed them at his daughter’s wedding.

“He was not allowed to bless them, and he followed the precepts of the church at their marriage,” Dr. Ramphele said.

Archbishop Tutu also used his post-church platform, mainly the Desmond and Leah Legacy Foundation, to speak out against “adaptation apartheid,” the growing divide between rich and poor countries in responding to climate change.

Through the foundation, he added his voice to the calls for climate justice and accountability from governments and big business.

Last year, he met with former Vice President Al Gore in Cape Town to discuss divestment from fossil fuels. And his foundation invited the Ugandan climate justice activist Vanessa Nakate to deliver a lecture in his name, alongside Christiana Figueres, the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

In a video message before the lecture, Archbishop Tutu called environmental destruction “the human rights challenge of our time.”

Over the years, he also lent his name to other causes, including the promotion of social cohesion, which is the focus of the Desmond Tutu Peace Center, and to H.I.V. research.

At the height of the H.I.V./AIDS epidemic, when South Africa’s public health response was marred by inconsistency and malaise, Archbishop Tutu’s name helped a research center in Cape Town raise its profile, allowing it to become one of the leading institutions of its kind.

Toward the end of apartheid in the early 1990s, it was Archbishop Tutu who coined the phrase “the rainbow nation” to describe the optimism of a multiracial South Africa. But in later years, he did not temper his criticism of the new government or the African National Congress.

While he enjoyed a close friendship with the party’s leader and South Africa’s first Black leader, President Nelson Mandela — the two men famously made fun of each other’s sartorial choices — Archbishop Tutu was critical of Mr. Mandela’s successors. He was particularly vociferous in his disappointment in President Jacob Zuma, who resigned in 2018 and whose administration was tarnished by corruption scandals.

Indeed, in 2011, Archbishop Tutu was openly incensed when the South African government under Mr. Zuma refused to grant the Dalai Lama a visa to attend Archbishop Tutu’s 80th birthday celebrations.

“Our government, representing me — representing me — says it will not support Tibetans who are being oppressed viciously by the Chinese,” Archbishop Tutu said in a news conference, visibly angry.

The South African government, believed to be currying favor with the Chinese government, denied a visa to the Tibetan spiritual leader three times, in 2009 and again in 2014, when he was to attend a summit meeting of Nobel laureates alongside Archbishop Tutu.

Archbishop Tutu’s critiques of the governing African National Congress continued, and in 2013, he said that he would not be voting for the party because it had failed to deliver on its promise of social justice.

His rift with the former liberation movement was also evident later that year when Mr. Mandela died. The government at first snubbed Archbishop Tutu, despite his prominence and their relationship, but then invited him to speak at the public memorial service.

This past May, in one of his last public appearances, Archbishop Tutu received his coronavirus vaccine shot in the hope that it would encourage others to do the same while dispelling misinformation, which has hampered vaccine uptake in South Africa.

“All my life I have tried to do the right thing and, today, getting vaccinated against Covid-19 is definitely the right thing to do,” he said after getting the jab, adding that it was also a “wonderful” chance to get out of the house.

“Believe me, when you get to our age,” he said, “little needles worry you far less than bending over does.”

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