Erik, I didn't mean 'challenge' in any aggressive sense, perhaps 'query' or 'question' would have been a better choice of word.
Personally I don't get hung up with BC, I look for accuracy above all.
I agree there. BC is just one factor, albeit an important one to LR shooters especially F/TR with both 308 and 223 having to be optimised for 900 and 1,000 yards shooting. I also regularly emphasise to people that there are other factors that sometimes seem intangibles to us mortals who aren't former rocket scientists (maybe to them too for that matter) which make bullets perform better (or worse) than their paper specifications suggest. The old-model 155gn .30 SMK, the ancient 190, 200, and 220gn SMKs too all do better at long distance than people might expect. Since I don't understand the minutiae of bullet design factors and their interraction, I can only sum it up as being 'ballistically well balanced', a very unscientific description.
I'm still very interested in your experience with the 220 Lapua. Since I've given up on heavies, I've not got anything throated for this bullet length, so won't shoot the 100 that the UK Lapua importer, Hannams Reloading generously gave me as samples in any great hurry. I am genuinely puzzled though why Lapua has adopted this design as it's obviously not intended to challenge the equivalent weight Berger Hybrids. With law enforcement and military sniper sales important parts of Lapua's business, I did wonder if it's geared to the .300 Win Mag or similar as a long-range design. The new 175 model appears to be squarely aimed at the ammunition market currently served by the same weight Sierra MK and Berger Tactical OTM designs, loaded into M118LR specification cartridges and similar. I've bought a few hundred and while I've not tried them yet, expect them to perform very well in the shorter-distance F/TR role and in non specialist HBar 308s used in various disciplines loaded at around magazine length.