From the moment you step into the home of Singapore's Asian Youth Games (AYG) Under-14 football captain Jeffrey and his loved ones, you're greeted by a dozen pictures hanging on the wall.
Black and white photos of Mark Lightfoot - father of Jeffrey - with a group of long-haired footballers, stare back.
Pictures of the family posing in front of Anfield proudly tell the tales of the Lightfoots' annual trips to Liverpool.
Football jerseys, complete with autographs, line the walls of the bedrooms.
Yes, the Lightfoot family lives and breathes football.
And some of that passion has surely rubbed off on Jeffrey, 13, having started playing the Beautiful Game at three.
As a toddler, Jeffrey loved to be like his dad. He followed his father wherever he went and would copy his every move.
A decade on, Jeffrey hasn't changed a bit.
Lightfoot, 51, a sales manager, was born and raised in Liverpool after which he played football for Chorley Grammar School.
'Back then, I had a bit of success with my school team and all I had was one newspaper mention.
'Now Jeffrey is representing his country, and has appeared all over the papers and on the Internet.
'I'm proud but a little jealous too,' said Lightfoot with a laugh.
But that has always been the story of Jeffrey's life.
Largely influenced by his father, Jeffrey fell in love with football after his first visit to Anfield.
'I think that is where his interest in football was first sparked off,' Lightfoot recalled.
'When he saw the atmosphere and the people cheering the players on the pitch, he must have wanted to be like them.'
Lightfoot added: 'I remember the first time Jeffrey touched a football, it was at a chalet in Pasir Ris.
'From then on, he loved to head down to the park with me and kick the ball around. Now with everything that's going on, I hardly get the chance to. So I miss that.'
But Lightfoot said he has never pressured Jeffrey into football.
'If Jeffrey came and told me that he wanted to be a table tennis player, or even a ballet dancer, my wife and I would have been fine with that.'
They have let their children explore other sports.
Jeffrey's older brother, Daniel, is a goalkeeper for his school and the youngest in the family - nine-year-old Sara - enjoys rock-climbing.
Support
But if the children's interest in sports came from their father, then the support has definitely come from their full-time soccer mum, Aslinda.
Aslinda, 45, always tries not to miss a match or training session.
She brings along food, energy drinks and medical supplies.
She has become so good at nursing her sons' injuries, that she's the designated physiotherapist, with a drawer full of first-aid supplies.
At games, Aslinda is usually more anxious than her children.
She said: 'I remember I used to run along the sidelines following the ball as it was played, cheering my boys on.
'But now I'm more toned down because Jeffrey told me once that he could hear me shouting all the way from the pitch.'
On this afternoon's match at Jalan Besar Stadium, Lightfoot said: 'When Jeffrey appears from the dugout, and my wife and I see him wearing his Singapore jersey and the captain's armband, I think we'll definitely get all choked up inside. We're very, very proud of him.'