St Mirren have decided to ditch holding a moment of silence for the Queen ahead of Celtic's visit on Sunday.
As reported by the Daily Record, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II will instead be remembered with a minute's applause.
It comes amid fears of mass booing from away supporters after Celtic fans mocked her passing with 'F*** the crown' and 'Sorry for your loss Michael Fagan' banners which were displayed in their Champions League clash in Poland against Ukrainians Shakhtar Donetsk.
Scottish football will be back up and running this weekend after games were postponed last weekend following the Queen's passing.
Clubs up and down the United Kingdom have have been invited to take part in various marks of respect, with a pre-match minute of silence, playing the national anthem and players wearing black armbands suggested as options.
St Mirren have instead gone for the minute's applause and manager Stephen Robinson is hopeful 'everybody is respectful'.
He said: 'I can only speak for us as a football club and myself. We'll be showing our utmost respect. We just hope everybody is respectful.'
BT Sport were forced to apologise after honing in on an offensive banner surrounding the Queen's death during Celtic's game on Wednesday night.
All UK teams playing home or away were permitted to hold a one-minute silence mid-week as a mark of respect, though after a meeting between Celtic, Shakhtar and UEFA, it was decided there would be no silence before kick-off for that game.
Players from both teams did wear black armbands in Her Majesty's memory.
The banner in regards to Fagan was unfurled during the Champions League anthem.
Fagan famously managed to scale the Buckingham Palace walls before creeping into Her Majesty’s bedroom while she slept in 1982.
The then painter and decorator, who has schizophrenia, spent around 10 minutes talking to the monarch about his family.
The late monarch thought Fagan was just a drunk member of staff, who was eventually tackled by a duty footman.
Last weekend's fixtures were postponed as a mark of respect after Thursday's announcement that the Queen had died aged 96.
English football is back up and running this weekend though a number of games including Chelsea v Liverpool and Manchester United v Leeds, have been subject to further postponements, with the Queen's funeral set to take place on Monday.