Leicester City's players and staff will fly to Thailand next week to pay their final respects to Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha following his death in October.
The club's fallen chairman was killed in a devastating helicopter crash outside the King Power Stadium on October 27 and was one of five people killed when the helicopter they left the stadium in lost control and crashed nearby.
Players and staff travelled to Thailand for the funeral in November but, according to The Independent, those who are not representing their countries will join Brendan Rodgers and his staff on a trip to the Far East to pay their final respects next week.
Rodgers said: 'I was made aware of that (Khun Vichai's cremation) when I came in.
'Next week, the international players will go away with their teams and the remainder of the staff and players will go and show their respects and travel to Thailand for the funeral.'
A week-long funeral was held for Srivaddhanaprabha in Bangkok and the Leicester squad flew 6,000 miles out to the Thai capital following their win at Cardiff.
Srivaddhanaprabha was a hugely popular figure at the club as he oversaw their rise from the Championship, the second-tier of English football, to become unlikely Premier League champions in 2016, beating 5,000-1 odds.
The billionaire perished with his assistant Kaveporn Punpare and Nursara Suknamai when the aircraft spiralled into a 'dead man's curve' when its tail rotor apparently failed.
The AW169 AgustaWestland helicopter's hero pilot Eric Swaffer and his girlfriend co-pilot Izabela Lechowicz also died - but potentially saved hundreds of lives by crashing away from the crowds of fans still in the surrounding area.
Rodgers also insisted he will be heavily involved in appointing a new head of recruitment after Eduardo Macia's exit.
The former Fiorentina scout will leave the King Power Stadium on Friday, ending his two-and-a-half year spell at the Foxes.
Celtic's head of recruitment Lee Congerton has already been linked with a reunion with Rodgers, although the former Hoops boss has remained coy.
But he confirmed he will take part in finding the replacement for Macia.
He said: 'I'm sure they'll be a number of candidates. I will be involved. It will be a club appointment but it is important the manager is involved.
'When I first came in, this was something that I was made aware. It was something that was pre-Christmas, that Eduardo was going to move on.
'He wants a fresh challenge but is a really good guy, the club will go through the process of finding a replacement.'
The Foxes travel to Burnley on Saturday sitting 10th in the Premier League, six points behind Wolves in seventh, which could earn a Europa League qualifying spot.