I really like that interview series of Erik’s. They don’t always abandon them though, watch the V2 final match. IMO the very top finishers have wind reading skills that are so refined and competent that an extremely accurate rifle, within the parameters of reasonable BC, is all they need. They would shoot worse with a more finicky rifle, recoil, or chasing the peaks of barrel life with magnums. They would beat a good portion of the Open field with a .308.
The interviewees resolute on .284’s, and yes there are some including Etik, are being 100% honest about their personal experience. However, there is truly such a thing as magnum 10’s - 9’s with other-than-magnums for that person. A-/B+ wind readers shoot a lot more of these magnum 10’s, than points they will drop just because it’s a magnum. The best wind readers don’t miss “magnum 10’s” very often, with their standard cartridges, though, - it’s just a plain old “10” near the X for them, and so a magnum upside for them is smaller or nonexistent. Erik isn’t going to interview B+ wind readers though, the magnum 10 isn’t appreciated much, maybe even generally belittled, and A+ wind readers don’t gain anything encouraging 10 magnums on each of 4 relays, 7 of which shoot very small and 3 of which are steered by straight A callers, anymore than Phil Helmuth gains encouraging the table to “gamble” such that 4 guys make bad calls, and one busts him.
I can say this with certainty, and it won’t sound good, but on the same relay, with the exact same .284 cartridge and bullet as the top shooters in the country, if you are a rung or two below that consistently year after year, you stand zero chance of beating them. The wind will be the same, and you have no arguable, conceivable advantage, while being a consistent lesser caller. If we are going say .284’s are superior because they often win or because champions choose to shoot them, then in fairness to the counter view we have to examine how many of them enter and where they all pan out, relative to the whole field, and whether they win by even the expected ratio. Of course there is nothing wrong with enjoying trying to win but that not happening, because these are shooting matches after all and therefore fun, just being realistic.
I keep in mind that shooting in greater wind toughens up skills. See Australia’s National and F/TR’s standout skills. Shooting TR is functionally the same as shooting on a range in Open with more wind, or the same wind but at a longer distance. Here though, our Open guys will be hard pressed to practice in wind that all the usual competitors don’t also see.
So, can we all eventually have equal wind skills if we just work hard enough and load well enough, so that we have equal chances to win with .284’s. I say no. That has never been true in any endeavor, that hard work alone can overcome talent+work. Sometimes it can’t even overcome just talent, with no practice. We never hear that a renown painter, writer, entertainer, or three point shooter practiced often, to become that good. Some guys shoot LR high master in a couple months.
It’s not a matter of not being smart enough to see a change or intuit one is due, and likely. We overcall a change very frequently, at least I do, such that being oblivious, blind and obstinate would have saved a 9. Ascribing the wrong solution to what is seen down range is so easy to do. A magnum (higher BC) should in theory keep you over the 10 more so that if you hit where you aim in the wind, it’s less costly.