In this article, a heuristic is said to be provably best if, assuming p not equal NP, no other heuristic always finds a better solution (when one exists). This extends the usual notion of best possible approximation algorithms to include a larger class of heuristics. We illustrate the idea on several problems that are somewhat stylized versions of real-life network optimization problems, including the maximum clique, maximum k-club, minimum (connected) dominating set, and minimum vertex coloring problems. The corresponding provably best construction heuristics resemble those commonly used within popular metaheuristics. Along the way, we show that it is hard to recognize whether the clique number and the k-club number of a graph are equal, yet a polynomial-time computable function is sandwiched between them. This is similar to the celebrated Lovasz function wherein an efficiently computable function lies between two graph invariants that are NP-hard to compute. (c) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. NETWORKS, Vol. 67(3), 238-245 2016