<p>Mowing the lawn, playing football with your dog, turning on the TV... footballers around Europe are struggling to fill the "big void" created by the coronavirus shutdown.</p>.<p>Many are writing about the unfamiliar experience on social media. Some have already come to the conclusion that "there is nothing to do".</p>.<p>Real Madrid players, forced into quarantine by a case of coronavirus in the club's basketball squad, have been training at home, where most of them already had facilities and equipment.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/coronavirus-updates-live-four-dead-in-china-hotel-collapse-quater-of-italy-population-put-under-lockdown-799686.html?_ga=2.27375036.1653821018.1584104499-1536226147.1579870440#1" target="_blank">Track live updates on the coronavirus here</a></strong></p>.<p>Captain Sergio Ramos posted a video on Instagram showing him sprinting on a treadmill.</p>.<p>Marco Asensio, who suffered a knee injury last summer, posted a video showing that he was continuing his recovery programme in his garden.</p>.<p>But even for sportsmen used to working out, there is a limit.</p>.<p>"I'm here, in my garden, there's nothing to do," French striker Karim Benzema said in a video on social media where he appeared alongside his dog, earning him a comparison with Will Smith in the post-apocalyptic film "I am legend".</p>.<p>Fabien Causeur, a Real Madrid basketball guard, has launched a live video channel to show his quarantine challenge.</p>.<p>He has been taking on athletes and celebrities in three-minute simultaneous excercise including Thibaut Courtois, the Real Madrid goalkeeper, and NBA star and former Real Madrid teammate Luka Doncic.</p>.<p>At Barcelona, players are following a "specific and personalised" programme set by the club which is monitoring their efforts remotely using biometric tags.</p>.<p>Luis Suarez had been a step ahead of Ramos, posting a video of himself trudging on a treadmill last week.</p>.<p>In Italy, Juventus midfielder Douglas Costa filmed himself practising his dribbling in his back garden with his dog struggling to fill the role of defender.</p>.<p>Alexis Sanchez, on loan to Inter Milan, has two golden retrievers and a much bigger garden but he comfortably outplayed them in a video he put up online. He also posted photos of himself topless, gathering chopped wood.</p>.<p>Jessica Melena, the wife of Ciro Immobile posted a cookery video on Instagram, showing the Lazio striker waving a spatula and mixing a cake while she coached him. Immobile posted his own video in which he juggled furry toys with his feet.</p>.<p>Napoli's Belgian forward Dries Mertens posted pictures of a work out with a huge bottle of red wine.</p>.<p>In France, Strasbourg midfielder Adrien Thomasson, was looking ahead to another empty week.</p>.<p>"We'll have nothing to do, in the middle of the season, it's never happened before. Our habits have been turned upside down," he said.</p>.<p>Thomasson is a ski fan but as other sports are also at a standstill that leaves a "big void" for this ski lover.</p>.<p>"I'm going to watch series, movies, it's going to be really limited."</p>.<p>Television is also the refuge for James Lea Siliki, a Rennes midfielder, who tweeted the times of a couple of French quiz shows. Later he admitted a passion for a French TV karaoke show adding "I'll spare you my voice".</p>.<p>Romain Thomas, a defender at Angers, said his daily routine involved jogging, gardening and watching French reality TV.</p>.<p>He said he has talked to team-mates.</p>.<p>"We said to each other: 'Look, it's a beautiful day, it's time to mow'. So I mowed the lawn in the garden, it gives me time to think about something else." </p>
<p>Mowing the lawn, playing football with your dog, turning on the TV... footballers around Europe are struggling to fill the "big void" created by the coronavirus shutdown.</p>.<p>Many are writing about the unfamiliar experience on social media. Some have already come to the conclusion that "there is nothing to do".</p>.<p>Real Madrid players, forced into quarantine by a case of coronavirus in the club's basketball squad, have been training at home, where most of them already had facilities and equipment.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/coronavirus-updates-live-four-dead-in-china-hotel-collapse-quater-of-italy-population-put-under-lockdown-799686.html?_ga=2.27375036.1653821018.1584104499-1536226147.1579870440#1" target="_blank">Track live updates on the coronavirus here</a></strong></p>.<p>Captain Sergio Ramos posted a video on Instagram showing him sprinting on a treadmill.</p>.<p>Marco Asensio, who suffered a knee injury last summer, posted a video showing that he was continuing his recovery programme in his garden.</p>.<p>But even for sportsmen used to working out, there is a limit.</p>.<p>"I'm here, in my garden, there's nothing to do," French striker Karim Benzema said in a video on social media where he appeared alongside his dog, earning him a comparison with Will Smith in the post-apocalyptic film "I am legend".</p>.<p>Fabien Causeur, a Real Madrid basketball guard, has launched a live video channel to show his quarantine challenge.</p>.<p>He has been taking on athletes and celebrities in three-minute simultaneous excercise including Thibaut Courtois, the Real Madrid goalkeeper, and NBA star and former Real Madrid teammate Luka Doncic.</p>.<p>At Barcelona, players are following a "specific and personalised" programme set by the club which is monitoring their efforts remotely using biometric tags.</p>.<p>Luis Suarez had been a step ahead of Ramos, posting a video of himself trudging on a treadmill last week.</p>.<p>In Italy, Juventus midfielder Douglas Costa filmed himself practising his dribbling in his back garden with his dog struggling to fill the role of defender.</p>.<p>Alexis Sanchez, on loan to Inter Milan, has two golden retrievers and a much bigger garden but he comfortably outplayed them in a video he put up online. He also posted photos of himself topless, gathering chopped wood.</p>.<p>Jessica Melena, the wife of Ciro Immobile posted a cookery video on Instagram, showing the Lazio striker waving a spatula and mixing a cake while she coached him. Immobile posted his own video in which he juggled furry toys with his feet.</p>.<p>Napoli's Belgian forward Dries Mertens posted pictures of a work out with a huge bottle of red wine.</p>.<p>In France, Strasbourg midfielder Adrien Thomasson, was looking ahead to another empty week.</p>.<p>"We'll have nothing to do, in the middle of the season, it's never happened before. Our habits have been turned upside down," he said.</p>.<p>Thomasson is a ski fan but as other sports are also at a standstill that leaves a "big void" for this ski lover.</p>.<p>"I'm going to watch series, movies, it's going to be really limited."</p>.<p>Television is also the refuge for James Lea Siliki, a Rennes midfielder, who tweeted the times of a couple of French quiz shows. Later he admitted a passion for a French TV karaoke show adding "I'll spare you my voice".</p>.<p>Romain Thomas, a defender at Angers, said his daily routine involved jogging, gardening and watching French reality TV.</p>.<p>He said he has talked to team-mates.</p>.<p>"We said to each other: 'Look, it's a beautiful day, it's time to mow'. So I mowed the lawn in the garden, it gives me time to think about something else." </p>