The son of Spanish
immigrants, Copado began his football career in his hometown of
Kiel, initially at Eintracht Kiel and later with
Holstein Kiel, where he came through the youth ranks. For the
1992–93 season he received a professional contract from
Hamburger SV, whose
scouts had been keeping a close eye on the young offensive player. From 1993 to 1995 Copado played in three
Bundesliga matches, the first on 20 November 1993 as a late
substitute in a 3–0 away loss against
1. FC Kaiserslautern. In
1995–96 he amassed a further ten appearances under
Felix Magath, before leaving the club in the winter
transfer window. Copado subsequently moved to Spain, joining
Segunda División team
RCD Mallorca in January 1996. In
his first full season he contributed two goals in 30 games (his first in a 1–0 win at
Real Madrid Castilla), helping win promotion to
La Liga. However, Copado would never play in Spain's top level, as he left in July 1997 and joined lower league side
Tennis Borussia Berlin – there, he played under
Hermann Gerland, the
manager mostly associated with the player's explosion. He ended the season with 12 goals as
TeBe was unbeaten and became
Regionalliga Nord champions; in the
2. Bundesliga, he would only score six goals in the following two seasons combined. For the
2000–01 campaign top division club
SpVgg Unterhaching bought Copado, at the express petition of club manager
Lorenz-Günther Köstner. However, after a few games, the player failed to produce on the pitch (including training), while also gaining a reputation for excessive partying. Therefore, he was suspended for ten months due to disciplinary reasons – during this time, he was forced to train on his own, and only when Köstner was fired on 13 September 2001 (with the club previously having been relegated) did the situation clear;
Rainer Adrion took over the ruins and the player was forgiven, but Unterhaching dropped another level. Under
Wolfgang Frank, who made him
team captain, Copado netted an incredible 58 league goals in three seasons (being instrumental in the side's return to the second level in 2003), operating as both
forward and
midfielder. Due to those solid performances, the 31-year-old returned to the top flight for the third time in his career, joining
Eintracht Frankfurt on a three-year contract. Copado eventually broke into the first team after early difficulties, scoring six goals during
the season – in December 2005 he was even awarded the
Player of the Month award. However, he only managed one goal in his 14 last appearances, losing the confidence of manager
Friedhelm Funkel and subsequently being sold in the following transfer window (although he still appeared in the first match of 2006–07). Copado joined
TSG 1899 Hoffenheim on 30 August 2006, being a crucial offensive element in the club's rise from the third (
Regionalliga Süd) to the first level in just two seasons (14 goals in his first year, ten in the second). He appeared sparingly during
the campaign's first half, managing to score a
penalty in Hoffenheim's 3–0 home win over
Arminia Bielefeld on 29 November 2008. On 16 December he was released from contract, returning to former side Unterhaching and retiring on 31 March 2009, having played his last game the previous day. From 2012 onwards Copado continued working with Unterhaching, as
director of football and youth and assistant manager. ==Personal life==