Youth and depth, a necessity born from circumstance
No limiar de uma partida decisiva pelo Brasileirão, o técnico Luís Castro se vê diante daquilo que o futebol frequentemente impõe: não a equipe que se deseja, mas a equipe que se tem. Lesões e convocações esvaziaram o setor defensivo do Grêmio, obrigando o clube a recorrer à juventude e à profundidade do elenco para enfrentar o Corinthians no sábado. É um momento que testa não apenas a capacidade tática de um treinador, mas a resiliência coletiva de um grupo que precisa encontrar coesão onde havia rotina.
- Três titulares defensivos estão fora — o goleiro Weverton convocado pela Seleção, Pavon e Luís Eduardo lesionados —, deixando o Grêmio sem sua espinha dorsal habitual na véspera de um confronto direto.
- O jovem Thiago Beltrame assume a meta em um momento de alta pressão, simbolizando a aposta forçada na profundidade do elenco quando a margem para erros é pequena.
- No meio-campo, Arthur e Gabriel Mec disputam uma vaga no time titular após saírem do banco na última partida, mantendo Castro em dúvida sobre o equilíbrio tático ideal contra o Corinthians.
- O provável time esboçado nos treinos desta sexta-feira mistura experiência e juventude, mas a falta de entrosamento entre os substitutos pode ser o fator decisivo num Brasileirão que exige consistência.
- O jogo começa às 16h30 na Arena, e o resultado dirá se as circunstâncias forjaram uma equipe mais resiliente ou expuseram as fragilidades de um elenco pressionado pela ausência dos titulares.
Luís Castro passou a sexta-feira no CT do Grêmio tentando montar um quebra-cabeça com peças faltando. A partida contra o Corinthians, válida pela 18ª rodada do Brasileirão, exigirá ao menos três mudanças obrigatórias no time — e possivelmente cinco.
A defesa é onde o problema é mais agudo. Weverton foi convocado para a Seleção Brasileira, enquanto Pavon e Luís Eduardo estão fora por lesões musculares. Thiago Beltrame assume o gol, com Marcos Rocha e Wagner Leonardo reforçando a linha defensiva. É uma configuração bem diferente da habitual, construída pela necessidade, não pela escolha.
No meio-campo, Castro ainda pondera. Arthur e Gabriel Mec, que entraram no banco no empate com o City Torque, são candidatos a titulares. A decisão dependerá do perfil tático que o treinador quiser impor a um Corinthians que chega a Porto Alegre em boa fase.
O provável time tem Beltrame no gol; Marcos Rocha, Wagner Leonardo, Viery e Pedro Gabriel na defesa; Leonel Pérez no meio com Arthur ou Noriega, e Gabriel Mec ou Braithwaite na outra ponta; Tetê, Amuzu e Carlos Vinícius no ataque. Um time jovem, de circunstância. Sábado revelará se essa adversidade fortalece ou fragiliza a campanha gremista.
Grêmio's coach Luís Castro spent Friday's training session at the club's facility working through a lineup that could look quite different when the team takes the field Saturday afternoon. The Corinthians match, set for 4:30 p.m. at Arena in the 18th round of Brazil's top division, will force Castro's hand in at least three positions and possibly as many as five.
The defensive reshuffling is unavoidable. Weverton, the starting goalkeeper, has been called up to the Brazilian national team. Two other defenders—Pavon and Luís Eduardo—are sidelined by muscle injuries. That means Thiago Beltrame will start in goal, with Marcos Rocha and Wagner Leonardo stepping into the back line alongside the players who remain healthy. The young Beltrame represents a significant shift from the team's usual configuration.
Castro has flexibility in midfield, where two more changes could materialize. Arthur and Gabriel Mec both came off the bench in Grêmio's recent draw with City Torque, and both are being considered to start this weekend. The tactical shape will depend partly on whether Castro wants to maintain possession or tighten the middle of the park against a Corinthians side that will arrive in Porto Alegre with its own momentum.
The probable lineup Castro has been working with in training shows Thiago Beltrame in goal; Marcos Rocha, Wagner Leonardo, Viery, and Pedro Gabriel across the back; Leonel Pérez anchoring the midfield with either Arthur or Noriega alongside him, and Gabriel Mec or Braithwaite on the other flank; and Tetê, Amuzu, and Carlos Vinícius in the attacking third. It's a lineup that leans on youth and depth, a necessity born from circumstance rather than choice.
The injuries and call-ups have compressed Grêmio's options at a moment when the Brasileirão demands consistency. Castro will need to find cohesion quickly among players who may not have extensive time together on the pitch. Saturday's match will reveal whether the adjustments strengthen or strain the team's campaign.
Notable Quotes
Castro worked through the lineup in Friday training, preparing for up to five changes— Correio do Povo reporting on the coach's session
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does losing a goalkeeper to national team duty force such a ripple effect through the rest of the lineup?
It's not just the goalkeeper—it's that Weverton's absence means Thiago Beltrame gets his chance, and that's a young player stepping into a high-pressure moment. But the real pressure comes from the two defenders injured at the same time. You lose three defensive pieces and suddenly you're reshuffling the entire back line.
So these aren't strategic changes Castro wanted to make—they're forced?
Exactly. Three of the five potential changes are mandatory. The other two, in midfield, those are Castro trying to find the best combination from what's left. Arthur and Gabriel Mec are both capable, but they haven't been starting. He's looking for the right balance.
Does a lineup this disrupted usually struggle, or can it sometimes surprise?
It depends on how the players respond to the opportunity. Beltrame is young, but young doesn't mean unprepared. The question is whether the team can build chemistry fast enough. Corinthians won't wait for Grêmio to find their rhythm.
What's at stake in this particular match?
It's the 18th round of the season, so there's still a lot of football left. But every point matters in the Brasileirão. A team that's already dealing with injuries can't afford to drop points because of lineup instability. Castro needs this group to gel quickly.
Is there any advantage to having fresh legs in the midfield?
Possibly. Arthur and Gabriel Mec haven't been playing much, so they're rested. But rest and rhythm are different things. Castro's banking that their freshness outweighs any rust.