I guess I can put my 2 cents worth in.
Benchrest is different that most, perhaps all, other Shooting Disciplines in that you are only as good as the Rifle sitting in the bags. Here is the analogy I like to use.
Let's say you have a local Shot Gun Club. You have club matches, just informal get together..
One day, one of the Grand Masters, for lack of a better term, of Shotgunning is in town and decides to come and shoot your match. He doesn't have a Gun, so he is offered a loaner.
He would still probably win the whole thing.
In Benchrest, if the same thing happenned, and he was offered a Rifle that was good, but not as good as the one you were shooting, he probably would not win anything. You can't make a Rifle that is locked into. .280 aging capability shoot at a sub .200 level.
In short, Benchrest is 75 percent Rifle, 25 percent shooter.
How many of you have see a new guy, buy pure chance, score a great barrel and some great bullets right out of the gate, and win. I have, several times. The problem is, when he uses up that barrel, and those bullets, reality sets in, and he either searches again for that great combination, or quits.
I run the Tomball Gun Club "club matches". We shoot the regular NBRSA VFS Format, with very relaxed rules on the Rifles. In fact, the rules for the Benchrest Class, the top class, are....."any legal firearm".
We also offer a Factory Class, and a Modified Class. On a good day, we might have 40 shooters, with 90 percent participation being in The Benchrest Class.
We give out the same 1st, 2d, and 3d place Ribbons for all three classes. Why don't we have more participation in the Factory and Modified Classes, I honestly don't know. It's certainly not for lack of trying. And, a lot of people in the Metro Houston area know about our Matches. Here is the chance for A relative new shooter to come to a Benchrest Match with a minimum investment, (we allow AR's in Factory and Modified), not have to shoot against the "gurus", and win a ribbon. Why don't they?
This old thing of different classifications in Competitive Benchrest comes up periodically. The fact is, it won't work. Great Rifles make Good Shooters. Give a person with a reasonable idea of how the game works a Great Rifle with a great tune, and he will probably beat you.
Most of the top shooters I know don't spend time at the range practicing to shoot, they spend time perfecting the ever changing combination. New barrels, new lots of bullets, new powder. They know the secret to Benchrest is the Rifle.
That is where there are no shortcuts. One the hardest things to do is to take that brand new barrel off because you know it's not going to cut it. Or take those 5000 new bullets and relegate them down to fireforming status because at the end of the age, they are going to shoot around .250. Regardless of your best efforts.
All through the 2000's, I shot a lot of matches. About 5 years ago, our Business really picked up, and now I just shoot local Score matches with an occasional group match tossed in. That, along with running the Tomball Club Matches pretty much take up my time. I like the score matches, because they are usually just one day, you go, shoot, get home in time to get rested for the next day's work. I'm 68 now, and the idea of traveling 5 hours, shooting all week end, getting back home in time to get up and face the working world simply does not have as much appeal as it used too.
I was all set to go to the NBRSA Nationals this year, but business just got in the way. I thought of going and just shooting Unlimited Monday and Tuesday,but I forgot they changed the Format. So I said to hell with it.
I really don't like to get in the "score vs group" argument. Let's just say that either requires the same dedication to getting the Rifle and the Combination as right as it can be if you expect to ever win anything.