I don't really understand what goes on in this thread... Do we make suggestions about the categories, or the matches themselves? If its the latter, definitely include Elix Skipper & Senshi (xXx) vs. Homicide & Hernandez (LAX) Ultimate X Match at Bound For Glory for the TNA Tag Team Championship Number 1 Contender Spot in the gimmick matches section. Skipper's HUGE spot on Homicide was enough to make that match amazing. Also include Money In The Bank at Wrestlemania 23, where Kennedy won.
For Wrestler of the Year, I would have to say that title should go to either Kaz, Samoa Joe, or Edge. All three men have risen to the top this year, and rightfully so. Even though Edge was injured for a long time, he won his first Heavyweight Championship and became top of the SmackDown! card. Kaz is now in the TNA main event alongside Booker T, Christian Cage, AJ Styles, Samoa Joe, Kurt Angle, etc. He displayed amazing skill when he faced Kurt and Christian at two seperate PPVs, and solidified himself as a TNA Heavyweight Title Contender. Samoa Joe held three titles simultaneously (Both Tag Team Belts and the X-Division Championship), worked with Sting, Christian Cage, and Kurt Angle, and is considered good enough to lead a faction that includes power-hungry Kevin Nash. Any three of these men would be deserving of Wrestler of the Year.
Pay-Per-View of the year is a hard one to decide, because almost all the PPVs were horrible. However, there are three that come to my mind that stand out. They are TNA Bound for Glory, WWE No Mercy, and ROH Driven. BFG (excluding the miserable Monster's Ball Match) was an overall great Pay-Per-View. No Mercy wasn't AMAZING, but it had three WWE Championship matches, the second gave Triple H his eleventh main event title reign, and the last match, Randy Orton won. Now, I haven't actually SEEN ROH Driven, but I'm hearing great things from some people. Even things that say its the best wrestling PPV in years. If I were one of you, I would consider going out and supporting Ring Of Honor, because it has tomorrow's stars, with no stupid gimmicks or move restrictions, working their asses off to get a shot at the big time.