1984 Campeonato Gaúcho
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Season | 1984 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Internacional |
| Relegated | Grêmio Bagé São Paulo |
| Taça de Ouro | Brasil de Pelotas Grêmio Internacional |
| Taça de Prata | Novo Hamburgo |
| Matches played | 344 |
| Goals scored | 601 (1.75 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Ademir Alcântara (Pelotas) – 21 goals |
| Biggest home win | Internacional 4-0 Caxias (November 4, 1984) Grêmio 4-0 Novo Hamburgo (November 11, 1984) Internacional 4-0 Pelotas (November 14, 1984) |
| Biggest away win | São Paulo 0-4 Grêmio (September 16, 1984) |
| Highest scoring | São Paulo 3-3 Santa Cruz (May 27, 1984) |
← 1983 1985 → | |
The 64th season of the Campeonato Gaúcho kicked off on April 22, 1984 and ended in December 13, 1984. Fourteen teams participated. Internacional won their 29th title. Grêmio Bagé and São Paulo were relegated.[1][2]
| Club | Stadium | Home location | Previous season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aimoré | Cristo-Rei | São Leopoldo | 12th |
| Brasil | Bento Freitas | Pelotas | 2nd |
| Caxias | Centenário | Caxias do Sul | 10th |
| Esportivo | Montanha | Bento Gonçalves | 6th |
| Grêmio | Pedra Moura | Bagé | 11th |
| Grêmio | Olímpico | Porto Alegre | 3rd |
| Internacional | Beira-Rio | Porto Alegre | 1st |
| Internacional | Presidente Vargas | Santa Maria | 9th |
| Juventude | Alfredo Jaconi | Caxias do Sul | 4th |
| Novo Hamburgo | Santa Rosa | Novo Hamburgo | 5th |
| Pelotas | Boca do Lobo | Pelotas | 1st (Second level) |
| São Borja | Vicente Goulart | São Borja | 8th |
| São Paulo | Aldo Dapuzzo | Rio Grande | 7th |
| Santa Cruz | Plátanos | Santa Cruz do Sul | 2nd (Second level) |