Plaudits have rightfully been heading Mesut Ozil's way after his terrific individual goal secured Arsenal a 3-2 Champions League win over Ludogorets.
The German playmaker, 28, bamboozled the Bulgarian side's goalkeeper and two defenders, as he all but walked the ball into the back of the net.
Charlie Nicholas, the ex-Arsenal forward, declared it "different class". Former Chelsea and Holland defender Mario Melchiot dubbed it "next level street football."
Even former Gunners hard man Martin Keown chimed in, stating how he'd still be celebrating if he'd ever scored one like it.
Which got the brains trust at Mirror __football to thinking: Was Ozil's virtuoso effort the best Gunners' goal in the Champions League?
Or was there an effort from yesteryear that's better?
Because, in fairness to the Gunners, there have been some absolutely splendid goals during their continual presence in the competition over the last 20 years or so.
So here, we've picked eight of the very best. Do they rival the German's solo strike?
Take a look and let us know your thoughts....
Freddie Ljungberg (vs Juventus, 2001-02)
Freddie Ljungberg was the goalscorer, but the man who took the plaudits for the outstanding assist was Dutch maestro Dennis Bergkamp, as an Arsenal side containing Stuart Taylor and Matthew Upson claimed a 3-1 win over Juventus.
Leading 2-1 - and having Taylor to thank for that lead after a number of fine saves - Arsenal were defending manfully late on, clinging on to their lead.
Then a glorious counter-attack, Bergkamp's genius and Ljungberg's tenacity ensured victory.
Taking a Ljungberg pass in an inside right position, Bergkamp faced up Paolo Montero, tempted him in, twisted one way, then another, invited Alessio Tacchinardi to his party, then embarrassed both with a wondrous drag back and flicked outside-of-the-boot pass that scythed through the Juve defence.
Timing his run to perfection came Swede Ljungberg, who lobbed over the sprawling Gianluigi Buffon, to secure victory.
Dennis Bergkamp (vs Bayer Leverkusen 2001-02)
Remember 2002? It was a strange time in the Champions League.
For one, there were TWO group stages. For another, it's the year Bayer Leverkusen knocked out both Liverpool and Manchester United, a matter of weeks after being drilled 4-1 by the Gunners at Highbury.
And on a cold night in north London, with the score 3-0, it was left to Bergkamp to add the coup de grâce against the Leverkusen side of Lucio, Ramelow, Ballack and Ze Roberto.
With seven minutes remaining, a poked pass from Sylvain Wiltord found Bergkamp. The pass did him no favours, with Bergkamp seemingly surrounded, but the Dutchman's touch was so good that it maneuvered him away from the retreating Ballack and put his body between the ball and both Bayer centre-halves.
Impulsive defending from future World Cup winner Lucio saw him gamble on nicking it, but Bergkamp, shrewd and cunning, buffeted the off-balance Brazilian and turned to face goal.
A touch out his feet, and a sublime chip left the stranded Hans-Jorg Butt backpedaling, unable to do anything to stop himself being embarrassed.
Thierry Henry (vs Sparta Prague 2005-06)
Thierry Henry was a bloody brilliant footballer. Just felt like reiterating that really. And one night in Prague in 2005, just about summed up the Frenchman's class.
A groin injury had seen Henry sidelined for the previous six weeks, and Wenger wasn't keen on throwing him in against the Czech champions.
However when Jose Antonio Reyes succumbed t injury after just 15 minutes, a half-fit Henry stepped from the bench, scored twice - and surpassed Ian Wright as the club's all-time record goalscorer.
His second goal was good in it's own right, but it was the first, just six minutes after entering the fray, which stands out.
A long ball down the inside-right channel from Kolo Toure was dropping over the heads of Sparta defenders, but Henry was already onto it. Realising that any touch out in front would take him down a dead-end, he deftly controlled with the outside of his right boot, killing the ball and watching defenders run past.
From there, Henry moved his body around the ball, not touching it, before firing, with the outside of his right boot, a sublime effort that arched around the body of a defender, and past Sparta stopper Jaromir Blazek.
Thierry Henry (vs Real Madrid, 2005-06)
Back in the second round of the 2005-06 campaign, Arsenal travelled to Real Madrid for the first leg of the first knockout stage.
With the game scoreless, there seemed little danger when Cesc Fabregas rolled a pass into the feet of Henry, four yards inside the Madrid half, just seconds into the second period.
But, inexplicably, Henry wasn't pressed as he took control, instead being allowed to turn. From there, it was nothing but va va voom.
World Cup winner Ronaldo made a half-hearted challenge but was shrugged off, as Henry pivoted and headed straight for goal. Young Spanish defender Mejia was then easily bypassed as the Frenchman made his way into the penalty area at top speed.
On his left-foot, with Sergio Ramos making up ground and preparing to lunge Henry found an accurate, low left-foot shot that swept past Iker Casillas' left hand, and nestled in the bottom corner.
Magnifiqué.
Cesc Fabregas (vs AC Milan, 2007-08)
On paper, Arsenal couldn't have had it too much tougher than their visit to AC Milan in the last-16 in March 2008.
The Rossoneri had won the trophy the previous year, held the Gunners to a goalless draw two weeks previously and had never been beaten by an English side at San Siro.
So it was going to take something special if Wenger's men were to progress to the last eight, and in the 84th minute they got just that, as Cesc Fabregas grabbed the bull by the horns and fired the north Londoners to victory with a goal they richly deserved.
The Spanish playmaker, then the darling of the Emirates, picked up the ball just inside the Milan half and faced up Italian midfield general Gennaro Gattuso.
Spotting a gap, Fabregas dropped his left shoulder and dodged onto his right foot, attacking a space between Gattuso and Andrea Pirlo, before, some 30-yards from goal, unleashing a whirling dervish of a shot, which bounced past the despairing dive of giant Australian goalkeeper Zeljko Kalac (whose nickname happened to be Spider).
It was a wonderful goal from the Spaniard, who to this day remains a favourite to the Arsenal faithful. Wonder what he does these days?
Andrey Arshavin (vs Barcelona, 2010-11)
The Barcelona of Xavi, Iniesta, Villa and Messi against the Arsenal of Djourou, Eboue, Song and Bendtner. On paper it looks a mismatch.
And for much of the evening at the Emirates, it was, as Pep Guardiola's side - who would win the competition - dominated proceedings.
But with two goals in five second-half minutes, the Gunners claimed victory in north London.
After Robin van Persie had equalised David Villa's earlier effort, it was left to Andrey Arshavin (a player who, when he was good, he was outstanding - four goals at Anfield anyone? - but when he was bad, well what was the point?), to score a well-taken winner after a sweeping counter-attack.
Much-maligned Danish striker Bendtner found himself surrounded by five Barca players deep inside his own half, when he popped the ball sideways to Jack Wilshere, who instantly cushioned a forward pass to Cesc Fabregas, taking six Barce players out of the game.
The Spaniard turned, before hitting a sumptuous pass between centre-half and full-back, for Samir Nasri to race onto.
Into the penalty area, Nasri held it up, cutting back before rolling across the penalty area, where Arshavin arrived bang on cue, before calmly side-footing into the back of the net.
Samir Nasri (vs Porto 2009-10)
Arsenal outclassed Porto with a five star display in 2010, to secure a 6-2 aggregate victory and claim a spot in the last eight of the competition (where, quelle surprise, they lost to Barcelona).
But they tore apart the Portuguese champions and it was French midfielder Nasri - then in the midst of perhaps his finest spell as an Arsenal player - who produced the game's standout moment with a goal of genuine world-class quality.
Picking the ball up near the right touchline, Nasri was faced by a defender. A little shuffle out to the touchline came to nothing, so he pivoted, and turned back.
From there, just for a split second, Porto's defenders seemed to stop, and space opened up before the wriggling Frenchman. He attacked it, and as he entered the penalty area, was converged upon by a trio of opponents.
But Nasri, light of touch and adroit with his movement, kept the ball close, touching with the inside and outside of both feet, dropping shoulders one way and then the other, bamboozled the Porto triumvirate (Raul Meireles, James Rodriguez and Alvaro Pereira, for the record) before calming himself and smashing low, off the far post, past goalkeeper Helton.
Nasri ran off celebrating like he'd just scored the best goal of his career. In truth, it probably was. A moment of majestic beauty from an often-overlooked talent.
Aaron Ramsey (vs Galatasaray, 2014-15)
Probably the sweetest strike by an Arsenal player in Europe ever. Like, in history. Looking back, Aaron Ramsey's ripsnorter against Galatasaray is still utterly bewildering.
Why? Because even now i still can't fathom how the ball flew so fast of his foot, with the Welshman's awkward looking technique as he meets the ball, left-footed, on the half-volley.
With Arsenal cruising at the Turk-Telekom Arena, a Joel Campbell corner is headed away. It bounces along to Ramsey, who connects crisply.
However Ramsey's technique sees little in the way of follow through as he connects. Instead, he keeps his knee over the ball and stops the swing of his leg at the point of connection - making it something of an ad-hoc stab.
However, the ball flies, reaching a shade over 53mph, as it bludgeons past Sinan Bolat (who still dives, credit to him), into the top corner.
A ludicrous strike from distance. But was it Arsenal's best ever goal in the Champions League?