50 yards can lie to you..in both directions..You can have stuff that looks amazing at 50(sk standard when you could get it), and will not be so hot at 100 and fathers.. You can also have stuff that is a mess at 50 (a lot of the norma lately) and it shoots well at a 100 and over..I think a lot of it has to do with how well the components are. My theory, I think sometimes the bullet itself has an issue, like the lead isnt uniformed around the axis, or something.. When you had great SD's and ES's and the paper doesn't show it, all i can think of..If something is good at 50, better than other stuff you are shooting, then when you go to 100 and 200 it is not as accurate there is an issue and you have a problem. We know that a bullet can't get more accurate going down range, so that means the said bullet is losing accuracy at a faster rate than the other lots you shot.. So even though the other lots you shot that were not as good at 50 as the one lot, they are able to stay closer the path you want it to be on over the time it was in the air. I hope I explained my theory well enough to be understood.