Grêmio vs. Inter: Player Ratings – Gre-Nal 449

With poor performance, the Grêmio was completely involved by Inter and lost Gre-Nal 449 by 4 to 2this Sunday night, in Beira-Rio. Amuzu and Edenilson scored Tricolor’s goals in the duel valid for the 5th round of Gauchão.

With the result, Luís Castro’s men parked themselves at nine points and could lose the lead in Group B to Caxias, who play this Monday, at 7pm, against São José.

Notes

Weverton. Although he made two good saves, he missed two of Inter’s goals. Use: 3.5.

Marcos Rocha. He was easily involved by Bernabei and Carbonero, in addition to scoring the own goal. Use: 3.

Noriega. He suffered a lot from the Colorado attack. Use: 4.

Wagner Leonardo. He missed both of Borré’s goals. Use: 4.

Marlon. Compromised on the left defensive side. Use: 4.

Arthur. He performed well below what he had been presenting. Use: 4.5.

Tiaguinho. He was unable to repeat his last performances and was substituted at half-time. Use: 4.

Crystallized. It was bad and he left at half-time. Use: 4.

Tetê. He participated in the two Grêmio goals in the match, but failed to help with the recovery on the right defensive side. Use: 5.5.

have fun Good offensive participation, in addition to the goal scored. Use: 6.

Carlos Vinícius. He participated in the two Grêmio goals in the match. Use: 5.

Luis Castro. He set up the team poorly, with no marking in midfield, and, when he needed to make changes, he also played poorly. Use: 3.

See also

Reservations

Dodi. It gave the false impression of improvement in marking. Use: 5.

Edenilson. He scored the second Grêmio goal. Use: 5.

In love. He came in and added little in the offensive part. Use: 4.

Willian. It came in the final minutes. No note.

André Henrique. It came in the final minutes. No note.

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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