1981 Campeonato Gaúcho
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| Season | 1981 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Internacional |
| Relegated | Armour São Gabriel |
| Taça de Ouro | Grêmio Internacional Internacional de Santa Maria |
| Taça de Prata | Novo Hamburgo Esportivo |
| Matches played | 189 |
| Goals scored | 375 (1.98 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Baltazar (Grêmio) – 20 goals |
| Biggest home win | Grêmio 6-1 Guarany de Bagé (June 7, 1981) Caxias 5-0 Armour (September 24, 1981) Internacional 5-0 São Borja (November 8, 1981) |
| Biggest away win | Caxias 0-5 Grêmio (July 12, 1981) |
| Highest scoring | Grêmio 6-1 Guarany de Bagé (June 7, 1981) |
← 1980 1982 → | |
The 61st season of the Campeonato Gaúcho kicked off on June 7, 1981, and ended on November 29, 1981. Twelve teams participated. Internacional won their 26th title. Armour and São Gabriel were relegated.[1][2]
| Club | Stadium | Home location | Previous season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Armour | Miguel Copatti | Santana do Livramento | 1st (Second level) |
| Brasil | Bento Freitas | Pelotas | 10th |
| Caxias | Centenário | Caxias do Sul | 8th |
| Grêmio | Olímpico | Porto Alegre | 1st |
| Guarany | Estrela D'Alva | Bagé | 9th |
| Internacional | Beira-Rio | Porto Alegre | 2nd |
| Internacional | Presidente Vargas | Santa Maria | 4th |
| Juventude | Alfredo Jaconi | Caxias do Sul | 6th |
| Novo Hamburgo | Santa Rosa | Novo Hamburgo | 3rd |
| São Borja | Vicente Goulart | São Borja | 5th |
| São Gabriel | Sílvio de Faria Corrêa | São Gabriel | 2nd (Second level) |
| São Paulo | Aldo Dapuzzo | Rio Grande | 7th |