Totally agree with you Boomer, but I am also willing to bet your rifles also shoot very well!

Though you may not be as obsessed with accuracy as Dog and I are, I also bet your CCB shot is right on the money every time for every rifle you seriously hunt?
There is something very satisfying and confidence inspiring about a very accurate rifle that (I readily admit) has little or nothing to do with hunting.
Strangely enough that works for me!
You are of course right Dogleg, but as long as I have a little extra money in the bank my rifles will shoot A LOT better than they need to.

I suspect yours will as well.
Now we come to the crux of the matter. We have developed a preoccupation with accuracy because we haven't thought of challenging ourselves in other ways. IMHO this preoccupation with accuracy has led to more than one hunter making poor choices as it pertains to his choice of rifle and ammunition, and has resulted in hunters being ignorant of the more practical aspects of marksmanship.
How many times have we seen folks post that they want a heavy barrel .308 bolt gun as their hunting rifle. To what advantage? Chances are the cold bore shot from that target/varmint rifle will be no more accurate than the cold bore shot from the same rifle with a light barrel.
The stocks that come as standard equipment on these rifles do not have a shape that makes handling or shooting either quick or natural. More often than not, these things have too much scope on them, and while they might be able to count the veins in a fly's wing at 1000 yards, being able to find a deer standing just inside a tree line is all but impossible, and tracking a moving animal at normal hunting ranges is impossible.
Match bullets are more accurate than their game specific counterparts, but hitting the animal is only one part of the problem, the bullet must produce sufficient terminal performance to produce a quick humane kill. A match bullet fired over normal hunting ranges which either fails to open up and pencils through or that simply goes to pieces and results in a large but shallow wound is a failure. Choosing the wrong bullet, will almost certainly result in wounded game.
As hunters we need to challenge ourselves beyond the mandatory 5 shot group from the bench or prone. Work on the shooting positions and scenarios that give you trouble, rather than shooting the same old drills that you aced when you were 12.
Your rifle might very well shoot MOA, but how fast can you get your rifle on target and hit it with a pair of off hand shots? At what range? Can you do it left handed? "Left handed?" you ask, Thats right, when I was in Africa I shot my warthog quartering away from me, on the run, with a left hand shot, because I trained myself that an animal that runs to the right is engaged more quickly and easily with a left hand hold, then by pivoting my entire body position. When the rifle came down out of recoil, I had already cycled the action by rotating the piece to the left, which brings the bolt handle to the top, without removing it from my shoulder, working the action with my left hand, then rotating back to its normal position for a follow-up shot, which proved unnecessary. How many shooters work a manual action at the shoulder? More often than not I see folks drop the piece to waist height, work the action and return it to the shoulder. By the time you've done that, the critter you were shooting at is in another province.
While we prefer to shoot from a low rested position, obstacles that prevent the target from being seen, or a quickly changing situation that does not always allow you the time to acquire a better position, means that an off hand shot is all you have. Set up obstacles you have to shoot over or around.
One of the most difficult challenges for a rifleman is to shoot a target coming straight on, and the closer the target gets the more difficult the problem is to solve. The tendency is to shoot where the target was. There are two ways to solve this. One is to allow the proper lead and the other is to drop to a low position that puts the bullet's trajectory on a path which coincides with the length of the target. But unless you try it you won't know how to go about solving it.
A good drill is shooting while winded. Pace off 50 yards from your firing line, then make a hard run across that 50 yards, drop into whatever position seems appropriate, and engage the target as quickly as you can with a pair of shots. No matter how quickly you shoot, you must retain the basic principles of marksmanship; breath, relax, look, press.
Practice getting your shot off quickly. In the filed a game animal might remain motionless for as long as you need to make your shot, but don't count on it. As soon as your sight is on target you should have pressure on the trigger.
Practice acquiring and checking your natural point of aim. In the field this will make achieving a good position instinctive.
Don't score your targets by the group size, score them by the length of the shot string. That is measure the distance from each bullet hole to the aiming point and divide by the number of shots to determine a score; low score wins. Figure out a way to reduce the score for taking too long to make a shot.
These simple drills are a good test of your practical marksmanship. They will also let you know if your rifle is suitable for the job at hand. But don't limit yourself to just these. Any shooting problem you can imagine is worth trying to solve.