1985 Campeonato Gaúcho
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| Season | 1985 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Grêmio |
| Relegated | Gaúcho Rio-Grandense |
| Copa Brasil | Grêmio Internacional |
| Matches played | 182 |
| Goals scored | 364 (2 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Kita (Internacional) Caio Júnior (Grêmio) – 15 goals |
| Biggest home win | Internacional 5-0 Aimoré (November 6, 1985) Grêmio 5-0 Pelotas (November 17, 1985) Grêmio 5-0 Rio-Grandense (November 20, 1985) |
| Biggest away win | Gaúcho 0-4 Rio-Grandense (September 22, 1985) Gaúcho 0-4 Grêmio (November 13, 1985) |
| Highest scoring | Brasil de Pelotas 3-5 Caxias (September 29, 1985) |
← 1984 1986 → | |
The 65th season of the Campeonato Gaúcho kicked off on August 4, 1985 and ended in December 8, 1985. Fourteen teams participated. Grêmio won their 23rd title. Gaúcho and Rio-Grandense were relegated.[1][2]
| Club | Stadium | Home location | Previous season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aimoré | Cristo-Rei | São Leopoldo | 9th |
| Brasil | Bento Freitas | Pelotas | 3rd |
| Caxias | Centenário | Caxias do Sul | 12th |
| Esportivo | Montanha | Bento Gonçalves | 7th |
| Gaúcho | Wolmar Salton | Passo Fundo | 1st (Second level) |
| Grêmio | Olímpico | Porto Alegre | 2nd |
| Internacional | Beira-Rio | Porto Alegre | 1st |
| Internacional | Presidente Vargas | Santa Maria | 8th |
| Juventude | Alfredo Jaconi | Caxias do Sul | 5th |
| Novo Hamburgo | Santa Rosa | Novo Hamburgo | 4th |
| Pelotas | Boca do Lobo | Pelotas | 6th |
| Rio-Grandense | Torquato Pontes | Rio Grande | 2nd (Second level) |
| São Borja | Vicente Goulart | São Borja | 10th |
| Santa Cruz | Plátanos | Santa Cruz do Sul | 11th |