José María "Mami" Quevedo García (born 1 June 1969) is a Spanish retired footballer who played mostly as a central midfielder.
Alongside another club youth graduate, Kiko, he would be instrumental as the Andalusians managed to avoid relegation to Segunda División three seasons in a row.
[1] After Cádiz went down in 1993, Quevedo moved with Kiko to Atlético Madrid,[2] but failed to settle unlike the centre-forward, signing for Real Valladolid after just one season.
In his second year he scored a career-best 13 goals, helping the team to barely avoid top-flight relegation, and added ten the following campaign;[3] on 19 May 1996, he and his teammate Alen Peternac accounted for all of their side's goals in a 8–3 away win against Real Oviedo, where referee José Japón Sevilla awarded a league-record six penalties.
[4] Quevedo then joined Cádiz neighbours Sevilla FC – one promotion and one relegation – and Rayo Vallecano, helping the Madrilenians to remain three consecutive years in the top tier.