This wasn't the problem at all. Lawler always being around had nothing to do with why they aren't around today.
Lawler never stepping aside to help create a new star hurt Memphis bad.
Lawler left in 1986 for 3 months. Business went into the tank. I am curious how business fared in 1980 when he was injured. I really don't know.
As far as the 1990s, who do you think was going to step in for Lawler? At the time, Jeff Jarrett was great in the ring, horrible interview. Brian Christopher was good. Don't know if he could carry a territory on his own the way Lawler could. They were only getting 1000-2000 fans a week in the 90s, sometimes only 5-600 people even with WWF stars coming in. There was nobody in Memphis who could have risen in Memphis to even sustain the mediocre business the way they were doing. Also, early 90s Memphis was an early training ground for people WWF wanted to go to TV. The minute they get their experience in Memphis, they were going to be called up. Nobody else was going to be a mainstay. They were either not up to Lawler's level or they were passing through. If Lawler leaves and is exclusive to the WWF in 1993, the USWA doesn't lose their TV in 1997. They lose it in 1993.
Lawler was also not a guy who was afraid to put people over. Hell, he gave Snowman the belt like 2 weeks into their feud. HE gave it up to King Cobra. He gave it to nearly everybody. This isn't Flair refusing to lose to Lex Luger. Lawler was willing to dance with anyone who wanted to dance. He was also content on being in the 2nd or 3rd feud from the top when it called for it.