Mamede was born in
Beja, started his sports life by playing football locally, then, in 1964, he tried school sport athletics and later he joined
Lisbon-based
Sporting Clube de Portugal's athletics department where he was an athlete coached by
Mário Moniz Pereira from 1968 to 1989. Arrived in Lisbon, he worked some time as an accountant for Sporting Clube de Portugal, and in a bank until 1990, and after that he would work as a municipal sports technician for the
Azambuja town hall. He was also a sporting goods store owner in the Avenida de Roma (avenue in Lisbon) for most of his life and after retiring from competition, he worked some time as an assistant athletics coach of Mário Moniz Pereira at Sporting Club de Portugal. However, he never won any high-level competition as he dealt very badly with pressure In the
European and
World Athletics Championships as well as in the Olympics, three competitions where he competed between 1971 and 1984, he either was eliminated from the finals, placed outside the top ten runners in them or dropped out of the final. In the
1983 World Championships in Athletics and the
1984 Los Angeles Olympics, he ran excellently in the 10,000-metre qualifying heats, but he placed 14th in the World Championships final and failed to finish in the Olympic final. He also competed in
cross country running, taking part in the
IAAF World Cross Country Championships eleven times. His cross country career was highlighted by a bronze medal at the
1981 IAAF World Cross Country Championships and two wins at the
Cross Internacional de Itálica. Mamede died on 27 January 2026, at the age of 74. ==References==