Many years ago, you used to sign a goalkeeper because they were good at saving shots.However, many more attributes are now taken into account when buying a new number one these days.Of course, they need to be good with their feet. That was the main reason Pep Guardiola ditched Joe Hart in favour of Claudio Bravo last summer.But there was a problem with Bravo - he wasn’t very good with his hands.Therefore, just 12 months after spending £15 million on Bravo, Guardiola spent a further £35 million on Ederson from Benfica.The Spanish boss will be hoping he can use both his hands and his feet.Well, the 23-year-old Brazilian certainly didn’t cover himself in glory in the recent Manchester derby.He completely misjudged Paul Pogba’s forward pass, allowing Romelu Lukaku to nip in ahead of him to score.

Watch: Ederson's mistake against Manchester United

But at least he’s good with his feet - or more specifically, he’s good at goal-kicks.

How do we know that?

Because of his ridiculous 70-yard goal kick during Manchester City’s 3-0 friendly victory against Tottenham.

Ederson saw Sergio Aguero’s run and found him perfectly with an outrageous kick. Unfortunately for Ederson, though, the Argentine couldn’t quite finish it off.

Despite bringing it under control perfectly, Aguero could only strike the inside of the post with his left footed effort.

Watch: Ederson's incredible goal-kick

Take a look:

Twitter reacts

And plenty of football fans on Twitter were raving about Ederson’s incredible goal-kick. Check out the reaction:

Guardiola on Ederson's goal-kicks

In fact, Ederson’s impressive goal-kicks is a quality that Guardiola identified whilst he was in charge of Bayern Munich.

"He has this quality, in the goal kicks," Guardiola said. "When the opposition makes high pressing and it's complicated, now we have the chance to put the ball in the other box, and of course we have a little bit more space in the middle.

"When I was at Bayern Munich we played Benfica in the Champions League and Ederson was there. When we tried to analyse them, we saw it [his kicking] four or five times and we organised a meeting to say: 'Guys, what's the matter? What is that?'

"We tried to work about that because he has this quality to put the ball in the other box and it's not offside."