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Berger’s Otis White Takes 1st Place at the May Spearpoint Ranch Match

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Otis White’s commanding performance at the Spearpoint May Extreme Long Range Light Gun Match is more than a single podium finish—it’s a vivid demonstration of how purpose-built components and relentless skill converge at the bleeding edge of what’s possible with a shoulder-fired rifle. By ringing steel at 2,911 yards with Berger’s 300-grain 338 Hybrid OTM Tactical projectiles and Vihtavuori N568, White proved that today’s match-grade ammunition isn’t just accurate; it’s a precision instrument capable of rewriting distance records in the hands of a shooter who trusts his reloads. The fact that two other top-three finishers also leaned on Berger components underscores a broader truth: when the 2A community invests in domestic innovation rather than waiting for regulatory crumbs, the ceiling on individual marksmanship keeps climbing.

For the firearms community, this result carries implications that stretch well beyond the desert ranges of Mesa. Every new distance record serves as living proof that the right to keep and bear arms isn’t frozen in 1791 technology; it’s an evolving craft where civilian competitors routinely outpace yesterday’s military benchmarks. White’s win with openly available match ammo and powder sends a quiet but unmistakable message to would-be restrictionists: the same tools law-abiding citizens use to chase steel at three thousand yards are the same tools that underpin responsible self-defense, hunting heritage, and the constitutional insurance policy the Founders envisioned. In an era when some politicians measure “common use” by arbitrary caliber cutoffs, performances like this quietly expand that definition with hard data and cold impacts.

Perhaps most telling is how quickly the rest of the field is closing the gap. With Danny Gilbert and Justin Shull also posting elite scores on similar Berger loads, the takeaway isn’t that one shooter got lucky—it’s that an entire ecosystem of reloaders, bullet engineers, and match directors is normalizing what used to be considered impossible. That normalization strengthens the cultural case for an armed citizenry that values precision over panic, data over dogma, and results over rhetoric. As distances keep stretching and components keep improving, the 2A argument writes itself in every ringing impact: an informed, equipped populace remains the most reliable safeguard of liberty.

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