Kayode says Italian training is tougher than Brentford's schedule
Quick summary
Brentford right-back Michael Kayode said training in Italy is tougher and less rest-focused than in England, which he believes helps explain the Premier League's higher match tempo. He also said he has no regrets about his path after leaving Juventus behind.
Full article
Attributed to original sourceItaly Under-21 international Michael Kayode thinks he has cracked why English football moves at a higher tempo after moving to Brentford and has no Juventus regrets. ‘The training is much tougher in Italy.’
EMPOLI, ITALY – MARCH 26: Jeff Ekhator of Italy U21 celebrates after scoring the team’s third goal with Michael Kayode and Luca Kaleosho during the UEFA Under 21 EURO Qualifier match between Italy U21 and North Macedonia U21 at Stadio Carlo Castellani on March 26, 2026 in Empoli, Italy. (Photo by Gabriele Maltinti/Getty Images) The 21-year-old came up through the youth academies at Juventus and Fiorentina before earning his €18m move to Brentford and the Premier League in January 2025.
He made 41 appearances for the Bees so far this season, contributing one goal and two assists from right-back, and is a regular for Italy at Under-21 level.
Kayode enjoying life at Brentford LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – JANUARY 04: Michael Kayode of Brentford during the Premier League match between Everton and Brentford at Hill Dickinson Stadium on January 04, 2026 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images) How has he dealt with the differences between Italian and English football?
“The training is much tougher in Italy, and you get far fewer days off,” revealed Kayode on Chiamarsi Bomber.
“Here you train 4-5 times a week, then you rest a lot more. Perhaps this is why people think English football has a higher tempo, because you only train as much as you need to, then feel fresh both physically and mentally once you play the game.
“It gives you more time to spend with your loved ones. Besides, the training sessions are almost all 11 against 11, we rarely spend that much time focusing on tactics. It’s about taking men on.”
Kayode looked back on his career path and a move that might’ve been devastating to a young player, when he went on loan to Gozzano and Juventus didn’t want him back.
“I might seem crazy, but I don’t regret it at all, because the fact Juve dumped me did give me the strength to reach this level. We were around 60 kids in that group and only 2-3 now play at professional level. Gozzano gave me the chance at age 16 to play against older opponents, Serie D is very different to a youth team.
“I loved being at Fiorentina, Alberto Aquilani was a great coach, both tactically and as a person. Vincenzo Italiano called me into the senior squad and his mentality is incredible, he always wants you focused.
“One day, he started me against Genoa, I didn’t think it was possible! I really did not expect that at all. I owe him so much, he wanted me to always have the hunger to keep improving.”
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What happened
Michael Kayode reflected on the differences between Italian and English football after his move to Brentford, saying Italian training is more demanding and allows fewer rest days. He suggested English clubs train only as much as needed, leaving players fresher physically and mentally for matches. Kayode added that Brentford's sessions are more focused on 11-v-11 play and individual duels than detailed tactical work. The interview also revisited his earlier rejection by Juventus, which he said helped motivate his rise to Premier League level.
Chance analysis
This is not a direct injury or lineup update, but it provides useful tactical and conditioning context around Brentford and Kayode's adaptation. His comments suggest structural differences in preparation that may help explain tempo and freshness rather than indicate any immediate squad change. For football models, the relevance is mostly background on player integration and team environment.
Likely minimal immediate effect, with mild positive context around Kayode's adaptation and comfort at Brentford.
Treat this as low-urgency contextual information on Brentford's training style and Kayode's adaptation, not a direct availability signal.