Premier League clubs will be inventive and stamp their own identity on their remaining games.

That is the view of Paul Barber, above, as plans take shape for the run-in.

Prem clubs have seen their Bundesliga counterparts retain goal music and even add cutouts of fans at matches since their resumption almost three weeks ago.

They have almost a blank canvas as matches take place in empty stadia and there could also be innovations in the way the games are broadcast.

Barber, Albion’s deputy chairman and chief executive, said: “There is a Premier League working party that’s looking at that, which I’m not on so I really can’t talk about what they’re doing.

“But they are working with our broadcast partners and working with the clubs to try and come up with something that really make sure that each game very identifiably is a Premier League fixture and then obviously trying to add some colour to the occasion for the fans at home and I think it is going to be obviously a bit different.

“It’s going to be not what we’re all used to but I think we have got an opportunity to showcase the games and perhaps a little bit of a different way to the Bundesliga.

“We’re very trusting in the colleagues that we’ve got on that working quality to come up with some great and creative ideas.”

More than a third of the 92 remaining fixtures will be screened free of charge.

Amazon announced yesterday that its four matches would be made available free to air, to go alongside Sky Sports’ pledge to do the same with 25 of its 64 games and the BBC’s four terrestrial games.

Fans will not need a Prime membership to view the games on Amazon’s Prime Video service.