The Making of Ederson: A Goalkeeper with Twinkling Feet and Cold Blood

Manchester City's Ederson. (Reuters)
Manchester City's Ederson. (Reuters)
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The Making of Ederson: A Goalkeeper with Twinkling Feet and Cold Blood

Manchester City's Ederson. (Reuters)
Manchester City's Ederson. (Reuters)

Pep Guardiola was a few months into his Manchester City adventure when his team lost 4-0 at the Camp Nou. City had done OK until the 52nd minute when the goalkeeper, Claudio Bravo, tried to play the ball out of defense. It backfired terribly as possession went straight to Luis Suárez and Bravo made matters even worse by handling the Uruguayan’s attempted lob outside his area to get sent off.

It was not Bravo’s first mistake, nor his last. But Guardiola made clear that night he would never abandon his strategy of playing from the back. “I’m sorry but until the last day of my career as a coach I will try to play from our goalkeeper,” he said.

It may not have worked in 2016-17 when the Catalan played Bravo and then Willy Caballero, ending the season trophyless, but in the summer he spent £34.9m on Ederson from Benfica and City have not looked back. They have won their first trophy of the season, are one victory from securing the Premier League and go to Liverpool on Wednesday for the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final. Finally they have a goalkeeper good enough for a club with aspirations to be among the world’s best.

Perhaps it is no wonder that Ederson, who has conceded 26 goals in 38 City appearances, ended up playing for Guardiola. The Brazilian grew up idolizing Rogério Ceni, the former Brazil international who is the top-scoring goalkeeper of all time with 131 goals in his 25-year career at São Paulo. “He is my only idol and will always be my main inspiration,” Ederson said. “I still watch many of his videos making amazing saves and showing his quality to start his team’s play from the back. His quality was extraordinary.”

As a boy Ederson spent hours watching Ceni on TV from the family home in Osasco, a rough area in Greater São Paulo, but he started as a left-back at a football school called Champions Ebenézer FC.

“He came because his older brother was playing with us,” says Gilberto Lopes, better known as Giba, who created the charity team to help youngsters growing up in one of the most violent parts of the suburbs. “As Osasco is a very dangerous town, we have to give a lot of attention to the children. Football is weapon that I use until this day to get the boys off the street.

“As he is left-footed, I started playing Ederson at left-back. He already had a powerful shot but he did not carry ginga [the rhythm] for dribbling, so I pulled him back to be a keeper. With the first shot he caught the ball without dropping it, and that was the beginning.”

Giba was impressed with the progress of this thin (5ft 9in and 123.4lb aged 13) but promising pupil, whose nickname still is, ironically, “Gordo” (Fat boy), and recommended him to a friend at São Paulo’s academy. “I was told that Ederson was already standing out as a goalkeeper,” says Antonio Rodrigues, Ederson’s first coach in the under-13 team, who has been at the club for 18 years. “I was impressed with the precision he had with the ball at his feet and his quickness and agility in goal.”

Ederson’s talent with his feet had been shaped in futsal. “That helped him a lot,” says Victor Severo, a childhood friend from Osasco who also played for São Paulo’s academy and lives with the Ederson family in Cheshire. “He used to play as a goleiro-linha [the so-called ‘fifth man’, a goalkeeper who joins the outfield players] to take advantage of his powerful shot. Due to that, our main tactic was to clear space so he could come from his box to shoot. He was so good with his feet he was challenging to become the top scorer.”

At São Paulo, Ederson was initially well regarded. “São Paulo had a plan to produce Rogerio Ceni’s successor, so our training sessions with the boys had a big focus on footwork,” says Luiz Batista da Silva Junior, then youth goalkeeping coach. “Although he was very shy, Ederson paid attention to all the exercises and learned everything quickly.”

But then Ederson’s dream turned into a nightmare. The phone rang, his mother, Joelma, answered and she was told by a member of São Paulo’s staff that the young goalkeeper was no longer needed.

“It was very sad,” says Severo. “It is terrible to receive this kind of news face to face; imagine how it was for him to find out that way, without a convincing justification. Obviously he will never forget the moments he had at the club but the way he was pushed out is also hurtful. He cried a lot.”

Ederson was encouraged by Giba, his mentor, to resume training in Osasco and it was then that another call changed his life. Someone linked to Jorge Mendes, the super-agent, asked Antonio Rodrigues, Ederson’s former coach, whether he could recommend a promising goalkeeper. “The first name that sprang to my mind was Ederson’s,” recalls Rodrigues. “I kept him in mind because of his huge dedication in training. When the person asked me about Ederson’s best qualities, I clearly remember saying about his distribution, dynamism and agility. Also I said: ‘I am sure that, if he goes to Europe, he will not come back.’”

So Ederson joined Benfica’s academy aged 16. In Portugal, he moved to the second-tier side Ribeirão and then Rio Ave before returning to the Stadium of Light, where he supplanted his compatriot Júlio César and grabbed Guardiola’s attention.

The next call he expects is from the Brazil coach, Tite, to go to Russia 2018. Claudio Taffarel, the 1994 World Cup winner and current Brazil goalkeeping coach, says: “When I started working with Ederson I wondered what his unemotional behavior was all about. I suspected that it could be excessive fear, as he was quite introverted and barely spoke. But over time, after we developed a good relationship, he began to open himself more, both in training and off the pitch, and I noticed that calmness is a very positive part of his personality.”

Ederson, since joining City for a British record fee for a goalkeeper, has proved the doubters wrong not only with his efficiency as a shot-stopper but also – and mainly – with that composure in possession whatever the pressure. “Pretty cold-blooded” is the description used by Taffarel, though he emphasizes that Ederson is not the finished article: “He still has room to improve his decision-making.”

Ederson’s form has established him as Brazil’s No 2, behind Roma’s Alisson. Although the 24-year-old has only one cap, it would be a shock if he were left out of the World Cup squad. “In spite of his young age he is impressively secure and this security is naturally transferred to the team in a very productive way,” Taffarel adds, aware that Brazil have unearthed a talent who should be with them for the long term.

The Guardian Sport



Sinner, Djokovic in Opposite Halves at Australian Open, Sabalenka vs Stephens in 1st Round

09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa
09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa
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Sinner, Djokovic in Opposite Halves at Australian Open, Sabalenka vs Stephens in 1st Round

09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa
09 January 2025, Australia, Melbourne: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka (L) and Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner pose with Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup and the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup during the draw for the 2025 Australian Open tennis tournament, at Melbourne Park, Melbourne. Photo: Joel Carrett/AAP/dpa

Defending champion Jannik Sinner and 10-time Australian Open winner Novak Djokovic have landed in opposite sides of the draw for the season’s first major, ruling out a replay of last year’s semifinal match.
Sinner upset Djokovic in the semifinals at the Australian Open last year before coming back to beat Daniil Medvedev in the final 3-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 for his first Grand Slam singles title.
Top-ranked Sinner has a first-round match against Nicolas Jarry and also has Taylor Fritz, Ben Shelton and Medvedev in his quarter of the draw. Fritz will open against fellow American Jenson Brooksby.
Djokovic and No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz could meet in the quarterfinals, with a possible semifinal against No. 2 Alexander Zverev.
At the draw Thursday to set the brackets for the singles fields, defending champions Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka walked into the official ceremony holding thei trophies.
Sabalenka won her second consecutive title at Melbourne Park in 2024 by defeating Zheng Qinwen 6-3, 6-2 in the final. Sabalenka will be attempting to win a third consecutive women’s singles title at Melbourne Park, something last accomplished by Martina Hingis from 1997 to 1999.
Sabalenka drew a tough opening match against 2017 US Open champion Sloane Stephens and has 17-year-old Mirra Andreeva and Zheng in her section.
“I have a lot of great memories and to be back here ... as a two-time Australian Open champion, it’s definitely something special,” Sabalenka, who won the Brisbane International title last week, said at the draw ceremony. “I hope that I can keep doing what I’m doing here in Australia.”
Third-seeded Coco Gauff is a potential semifinal rival for Sabalenka. Gauff has a challenging first-round match against former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin and is in the same section of the draw as seventh-seeded Jessica Pegula.
The Australian Open starts Sunday morning in Melbourne (Saturday night EST) and will run for 15 days.
Djokovic will be playing in his first event alongside new coach Andy Murray, his former on-court rival and a three-time major champion. Nobody has won the men's title at Melbourne Park more often than Djokovic, although he said he still feels trauma from the one year he wasn’t allowed to play.
Nick Kyrgios, the 2022 Wimbledon runner-up who withdrew from an exhibition against Djokovic this week because of an abdominal strain, will face Jacob Fearnley in the first round if the mercurial Australian is fit enough to contest his first major since the 2022 US Open. Kyrgios is in the same section as Zverev.