I will chime in, if you are picking up a gun as a trainer for f-class it does not have to be superduper accurate. One moa is fine and many production guns can do that.
So at 300 yards your savage could be getting a 3 inch group and your anshultz might be getting 1.5 inches. However wind will push either bullet over my nearly 4 inches per one mile an hour. So mechanical accuracy causes a 1.5 inch change in point of impact, but a 2 MPH error in estimating the wind causes a 8 inch change in point of impact.
High end guns are great for shooting small groups at short distances. They can shoot slightly better at extended range, but mechanical accuracy is less important than reading the conditions at extended range.
Personally I am shooting a toz 8 which I have installed a rail so that I can swap my sightron 8x32x56 with my f-class gun easily. My TOZ cost 99$ from epps and shoots a bit under a minute, which is fine for my purposes.
Also I see the low ballistic coefficient of the 22 lr as an advantage. It allows cheap long range practice at relatively short ranges. I do not have ready access to a 900 Meter range and even if I did, plinking at that range is quite a bit more involved then plinking at 300 yards.