Revenant:
I would just add a couple of things:
- How hard you hold the gun and the amount,if any) of shoulder pressure you use is really an individual thing. Try some different things..your targets will tell you what your setup should be.
- A good starting point is just a bit of shoulder pressure against the butt, This is a lot easier if your front rest has a fore arm stop on it, but you can do it w/wo a stop.
- Try a gentle grip with your shooting hand around the wrist of the stock to start with. Start with your thumb on the action tang with just a bit of pressure. If you elevate your elbow with a bag this will help to keep you from twisting the gun as it comes back in recoil.
- Even with a 1.5-2 oz. trigger like we use in these BR guns, trigger control is an area that's very important. Don't slap the trigger..use a nice, quick, controlled pull on the trigger.
- Proper follow through is one area that gets BR shooters in trouble. Keep your head down as the gun comes back and develop good follow through after the gun fires. Don't be in such a hurry to look through the scope to see the target that you start lifting your head up as the gun comes back. That bullet has gone where it's gone, no matter how fast you look through the scope.
- Train yourself to shoot with both eyes open. After a shot, ask yourself if you know
exactly where the crosshairs were when the gun fired.
You will almost certainly change these things around as you get used to your gun and setup but this may give you some ideas for how to start. If possible, have an experienced BR shooter watch you and critique your form.
Have fun!

-Al
P.S. The
first pice of equipment a new shooter to the accuracy game should invest in is a couple of decent windflags and stands. Use 2 at 100 to start with. Without flags, you'll waste more money on components in two or three range sessions than they cost...and you still won't have flags. I
can't emphasize this enough for a new shooter.