Stuart Storer skips down the right wing, looks up and delivers an inch perfect cross which Bobby Zamora flicks on for Peter Ward, arriving late at the far post, to rifle home.
Fantasy football? Absolutely. Maybe even Mark Lawrenson started the move with a surge out of defence before finding the ever-willing Brian Horton.
These are all Albion greats but are they the club's finest? That's now for you to decide.
Throughout the summer in the Sports Argus we will be asking you to nominate the greatest players ever to pull on the blue and white stripes.
Week by week we will be looking at each position, starting tomorrow with the goalkeepers.
Readers will get the chance to vote for their favourite by post, email, text and via our website.
Our Albion dream team will be compiled as the summer goes on and at the start of the new football season each Sports Argus reader will get a commemorative poster featuring the best 11 players and the club's finest manager.
Would Mark McGhee come into the thinking? Other managers may have achieved more in terms of trophies but McGhee not only got Albion promoted via a glorious day in Cardiff but has also kept the Seagulls in the Championship on a budget which would be loose change to some rivals.
How many other modern day names would make the team? Danny Cullip would surely come into contention along with the likes of Paul Rogers, Kerry Mayo and Charlie Oatway.
A large chunk of nominations will no doubt come from the club's First Division days of the late Seventies and early Eighties.
As well as Ward, Lawrenson and Horton, the likes of Steve Foster, Graham Moseley, Peter O'Sullivan, Jimmy Case, Gary Stevens and Michael Robinson enjoyed some wonderful times with the club.
Barry Lloyd's play-off final team of 1991 included some fine players such as Ian Chapman, Dean Wilkins and Mike Small while his promotion side three years earlier featured the likes of Garry Nelson, John Keeley and Alan Curbishley.
But the choice is not limited to the last 30 years. This is Albion's all-time greatest team so pre-war players plus names from the Fifties and Sixties are all in contention.
Our series will no doubt conjure up plenty of debate. Charlie Webb is one of the central figures in the club's history.
He helped Albion win the FA Charity Shield and later managed the club for 28 years, taking charge of 1,215 games but will today's supporters remember what he did for the club?
When choosing the strikers in our 4-4-2 line-up how do you choose only two from the likes of Ward, Zamora, Robinson, Nelson, Kit Napier, Kurt Nogan and Tommy Cook?
Tomorrow we start with the greatest goalkeepers to play for the club and the winner will be announced in The Argus next Friday.
You will only have until 9am next Thursday morning to make your nomination, which can be done by a single name or by your choice with a brief explanation of why he should be included in the Albion dream team. So get your thinking caps on, read the Sports Argus tomorrow morning and vote to make sure your favourite does not miss out.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article