She is one of the more than 70's players who are in strict quarantine and have ended up in a nightmare.

Rodents have invaded her room.

She has changed rooms but the mice have come back there as well.

"A new room but the same story", she writes on Twitter and has posted a post where a little mouse wanders around the room.

Can not sleep

The presence of the small unwelcome guests means that the Kazakh cannot sleep.

"I wanted to go to bed but neeeeeej it did not work," she writes.

Players are not allowed to leave the hotel room, if they break the rules, they are threatened with high fines and police surveillance outside the room, and the window in the room cannot be opened, which makes the air stagnant.

On Instagram, she has posted a picture where she holds up a sign with the text:

"We need fresh air to breathe."

The tournament starts on February 8.

28-ranked Julia Putintseva, 26, was born in Moscow and competed for Russia until 2012 when she switched to Kazakhstan.

With a WTA title under her belt, she is a confident player who often goes a couple of rounds in many Grand Slam tournaments, in the quarterfinals of the US Open this fall.

She became a professional already as a 14-year-old and has played together SEK 40 million in her career without breaking through as a name for the large audience.

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Cori Gauff is allowed to train in the hotel room during the quarantine.

Photo: Bildbyrån / Twitter