1989 Campeonato Gaúcho
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Season | 1989 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Grêmio |
| Relegated | São Paulo Internacional de Santa Maria |
| Copa do Brasil | Grêmio Internacional |
| Série B | Juventude Caxias Santa Cruz Esportivo Novo Hamburgo Pelotas |
| Matches played | 189 |
| Goals scored | 393 (2.08 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Caio (Juventude) – 10 goals |
| Biggest home win | Grêmio 5-0 Santa Cruz (March 1, 1989) Juventude 5-0 Internacional de Santa Maria (July 2, 1989) |
| Biggest away win | São Paulo 0-4 Passo Fundo (March 19, 1989) Pelotas 0-4 Grêmio (May 21, 1989) |
| Highest scoring | Juventude 4-3 Grêmio (April 16, 1989) |
← 1988 1990 → | |
The 69th season of the Campeonato Gaúcho kicked off on February 26, 1989, and ended on August 13, 1989. Fourteen teams participated. Holders Grêmio won their 27th title. São Paulo and Internacional de Santa Maria were relegated.[1][2]
| Club | Stadium | Home location | Previous season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aimoré | Cristo-Rei | São Leopoldo | 9th |
| Caxias | Centenário | Caxias do Sul | 6th |
| Esportivo | Montanha | Bento Gonçalves | 8th |
| Glória | Altos da Glória | Vacaria | 1st (Second level) |
| Grêmio | Olímpico | Porto Alegre | 1st |
| Internacional | Beira-Rio | Porto Alegre | 2nd |
| Internacional | Presidente Vargas | Santa Maria | 7th |
| Juventude | Alfredo Jaconi | Caxias do Sul | 5th |
| Lajeadense | Florestal | Lajeado | 11th |
| Novo Hamburgo | Santa Rosa | Novo Hamburgo | 2nd (Second level) |
| Passo Fundo | Vermelhão da Serra | Passo Fundo | 10th |
| Pelotas | Boca do Lobo | Pelotas | 3rd |
| São Paulo | Aldo Dapuzzo | Rio Grande | 12th |
| Santa Cruz | Plátanos | Santa Cruz do Sul | 4th |