Wellington Phoenix have launched an investigation into the Wi-Fi situation at their remote training facility in Sydney.

Insuring 24 players can watch Netflix buffer-free is one of the unique challenges facing Phoenix operations manager Shaun Gill ahead of the team's two-week stay in quarantine.

Per the Australian government's new travel restrictions, the Phoenix must get through 14 days of isolation before they can resume the A-League season.

GETTY IMAGES Phoenix general manager David Dome and operations manager Shaun Gill address the media in Wellington.

But Gill was confident the facility that will be housing the Phoenix over the next fortnight will have enough activities to keep the players preoccupied.

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"We're extremely comfortable with the facility that we've got," Gill said. "It can do everything we need and still give the players some flexibility at the same time. They're not just stuck in a room for 24 hours a day."

Gill travelled with the team to Sydney on Wednesday and acknowledged that managing boredom was a genuine issue for the playing squad, who will effectively have the same daily routine for the next 14 days.

"We will have breakfast, we will train, there will be lunch, some days there will be a gym session in the afternoon and then it's dinner, and there's going to be 14 days of that," he said.

GETTY IMAGES Goalkeeping coach Paul Gothard pushes a trolley full of footballs.

"We're comfortable with the routine and it's not going to be a lot different to when we go away for three or four days, it's now just going to be three to four weeks."

Although Gill refused to disclose where the Phoenix the would be staying, other than revealing it was somewhere in greater Sydney, he said the facility was approved by the New South Wales Department of Health.

"Basically we're together as a group without any contact with the outside world," he said.

"Meals will be done in such a way that they will be set, the people who set them will leave, hygiene policies we are comfortable with at the facility, we'll go and out and then we'll leave and they'll come and clean up. There will be very minimal contact so in some regard we're going into a pretty safe environment.

"The thing we are most pleased about is that there are recreation places like a gym with basketball, table tennis, some lecture theatres with big screens. The boys will take PlayStations, the Wi-Fi is one we'll have to check on when we get there because there will be a bit of Netflix going, so we need to make sure the streaming quality is good enough for them to be comfortable."

Once they have completed 14 days of isolation, the Phoenix will move into a dedicated floor at a Sydney hotel. All of their remaining regular season games will be played within NSW.

"We're pretty confident we can get this done and the playing group has been absolutely amazing, I must say that. They're behind it 100 per cent. They all had the option to stay behind if they wanted but there's mixed emotions.

"It's obviously something challenging and new that we're not used to but at the same time it's been a fantastic season to date and a lot of them are still keen to see how far they can go."