ANDRIY SHEVCHENKO'S son is part of Chelsea's academy – and could qualify to represent England through his residency status.
Former Blues star and ex-Ukraine boss Shevchenko Sr could one day see his son Kristian play in white.
Kristian Shevchenko turned 15 last November and is the second of the former Blues striker's four sons.
He was born and raised in London, making him potentially eligible to play for the Three Lions as a UK passport holder.
Shevchenko scored Chelsea's opening goal in a 4-0 win against Watford in 2006 – just his second Stamford Bridge goal following his £30m move from AC Milan – the day after his son's birth.
He and team-mates Frank Lampard, Ashley Cole and Didier Drogba marked the goal with a 'rock the baby' celebration.
And in 2020, Shevchenko confirmed his son was playing for the Blues youngsters, saying: "My second son is training at Chelsea academy.
"This is a very good school, which brought up more than a dozen players of excellent level."
Kristian would also qualify to play internationally for Ukraine and likely the USA and Poland via his mother's citizenship – Shevchenko's wife is Polish-American model Kristen Pazik.
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Asked which national team he would like his son to represent in the future, the 45-year-old said: "I would like to face such a choice. I'd love to. If there is to be such a choice, then we will talk."
The ex-Ukraine international-turned-boss, who scored 48 goals in 111 games for his country between 1995-2012, is their all-time top scorer and was appointed manager in 2016.
He failed to lead them to the 2018 World Cup in Russia after the team were knocked out in qualifying by eventual runners-up Croatia.
Shevchenko eventually quit after losing to England in the quarter-finals of Euro 2020.
He then had a short stint with Italians Genoa, lasting just two months as he lost seven times with just one win.
The former AC Milan striker famously struggled to adapt to life in the Premier League after leaving San Siro for Chelsea, scoring only 23 goals for the Blues during his two-season stay.
Asked whether he believed the move to West London had been a mistake, he said: "In no way. I’m not even going to discuss that. I do not tidy up the past. Everything is as it should have happened, so it happened.
"I have been living in London for the past 13 years. My family is there, it’s convenient there, plus I wanted my children to go to school there."
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