I thought I might try creating new topics to generate discussion by just picking a year and promotion at random and we can discuss our favorite memories of the year, the best matches we've seen from the year and that sort of thing. So, this is a place for wrestling, nostalgia and match recommendations, actually.
The year started off with some changes being made in the hierarchy. Turner execs wanted the NWA to start drawing money, and they wanted immediate results, and the feeling was that they needed a new booker that wasn't Ric Flair, so Flair was axed in favor of Ole Anderson. 1989 was riddled in politics, but it didn't actually catch up to the product until 1990, as you had several people making plays for power and some of them succeeding and some of them failing. The plan all along was for the Horsemen to turn on Sting, leading to Sting winning the belt from Flair at Wrestle War '90. Sting was very hot at the time, but would injure his knee climbing the cage at the Clash just 19 days before he was to win the title, and when he came back from his injury five months later, he had lost a lot of his momentum, and his title run bombed. Ole was fired by year's end and the way was being paved for Dusty Rhodes to come back into the promotion as the head booker.
The wrestling was typically very good for most of the year, but the booking was highly questionable. Thunderbolt Patterson wanted a job in the company and threatened to have the NAACP picket CNN Center unless they put him in a television role, so Turner execs basically forced WCW to hire him and use him. The angle they did was pretty tasteless, with Flair and Ole Anderson destroying a series of black jobbers with Patterson being their spokesperson until Junkyard Dog finally came to the rescue, giving Flair one of the worst matches of his career at the June Clash. Speaking of Flair, 1990 was also a year that they felt the Flair era needed to end completely, and they started moving away from him after dropping the belt to Sting, putting him in the midcard to feud with fellow heels Doom and Teddy Long. Flair stepping aside in and of itself wouldn't have been so bad, but fans were accustomed to long, good title matches that Sting just wasn't capable of delivering. Lex Luger also started off the year as the hottest heel they had and was turned babyface to make up for Sting's absence. There was a big controversy over whether Flair should drop the title to Luger, which played a part in him getting removed as head booker, as Flair still felt he should wait for Sting since he had promised him he would. When Herd tried to force his hand and have him drop the belt to Lex on a house show, Flair required a request in writing 48 hours in advance, which his contract stated he would always receive. He didn't receive that request, and thus, Herd had no ground to stand on. The two were heavily at odds by this time. Luger apparently was very upset about this, but just a few months earlier, he made it very clear that he wanted no part of the belt because he didn't want to be a scapegoat for the low attendance figures at the time.
Flair and Herd were also at odds over a match at a TV taping in February of 1990 on an episode of Saturday Night on TBS that was heavily influenced by D.ave M.eltzer's suggestions to the booking committee at the time. Flair went against Brian Pillman and wanted to put him over, but was told he would be going over clean, and it took Kevin Sullivan going to him and calming him down face-to-face before the match before Flair finally agreed to get the win. From Flair's point of view, he wanted to elevate Pillman. From Herd's point of view, he was getting sick of Ric's outbursts and thought he was too old to be the centerpiece of the company at that point, and Flair was getting blamed for them not drawing.
Lots of good matches that year, both on TV and on PPV, and I'll let the rest of you cover that. Lots of memorable booking as well, so plenty to discuss. I'll pick another random year and promotion tomorrow.