Cordero was born 28 January 1972 in Badalona, Province of Barcelona, and in 2012 was living in the nearby town of Olesa de Montserrat. He has cerebral palsy.[2][3] Before he concentrated on boccia, he participated in athletics and cycling.[4] As of 2012[update], he was working as an office automation consultant,[4] and is the athlete representative on the Catalan Sports Federation of Cerebral Palsy.[5]
Boccia
Cordero is classed as a BC2 boccia competitor, a category for players with cerebral palsy who are able to throw the ball without assistance.[2][6] His first major international medal came at the 2003 World Cup in New Zealand: he won bronze as an individual and silver as part of the Spain team.[2] At the 2004 Paralympics, he reached the semifinal of the individual BC2 class, losing the bronze medal match to his Portuguese opponent,[2] and as a member of the Spanish team, won a bronze medal in the team BC1-BC2 event.[7]
He was a member of the Spain teams that won bronze at the 2005 European Championships and silver at the 2007 World Cup.[2] From 2008, Cordero received funding under the Plan ADOP scheme designed to provide financial support for Paralympic competitors.[8] At the 2008 Paralympics in Beijing, he was a member of Spain's BC1-BC2 team that again finished third, and reached the quarter final in his individual event.[2]
He won team bronze at the 2009 European Championships and at the 2010 World Championships.[4] At the Spanish Boccia Club Championship in Elche in June 2011, Cordero, representing the CE Llars club, won the BC2 individual competition.[9] In August, he was a member of the eleven-strong Spain squad for the 2011 World Cup in August, an event that contributed ranking points towards qualification for the London Paralympic Games; he came ninth in his individual event.[10][11]
Cordero had joined the Infinits Somriures club by the start of the 2013–14 season, when he and Manolo Martín were equal on points at the top of the Spanish national rankings in the BC2 classification.[16] Both were members of the Spanish team at the European Championships contested in June 2013 in Guimaraes, Portugal.[17] Martín won the bronze medal, Cordero was eliminated at the group stage.[18]
^"Boccia World Rank List"(PDF). Boccia International Sports Federation. 31 May 2013. Archived from the original(PDF) on 7 January 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2014.