If you use too much slope in your mount, you might overpower your scope's "down" adjustment range, and not be able to zero in at 100....
The thing to do is to find out how much adjustment range your scope has (some scopes have surprisingly little, e.g. the Nightforce BR scope). Then get a base with no more than half that amount of down-slope.
Another option is to use a two-piece base, or a one-piece base with no slope, but to use Burris rings with changeable plastic inserts - you choose insert sizes to give you however much down-slope you need.
Will you be shooting factory ammo or handloads? 2850fps is very easily achievable with a 30" barrel. 2900-2950 is typically what most full-power ammo will give, and some shooters go to 3000-3050fps. And I think factory Lapua ammo will also easily get 2850fps; so 2850fps is a pretty conservative figure to use.
Run the numbers through
JBM Ballisitics and do a little playing around. Choose the "(Litz)" data for your bullet if it is available - in the case of the 155 Scenar, it is (the Litz data uses actual measurements, fitted to the G7 drag curve - it is quite an improvement over using the G1 curve for long range calcs. The simple version though is "use Litz if available" ;-)
A Lapua 155 @ 2850fps, using the Litz data, at "sea level standard" atmospheric conditions, will go subsonic at 1070 yards. At that range, the bullet will have dropped 38.6MOA from a 100 yard zero.
So if you have a scope with at least 80 MOA of elevation adjustment (and some of the 30mm target scope do have this much or more), you don't need a sloped base to shoot out to this distance.
If you have my B&L 6-24X scope with 29MOA of elevation adjustment (beautiful optics, shame about such a limited adjustment range), using an ordinary base you'd have less than 15 MOA of "up" adjustment - you'd be able to get on paper at 600 yards, but not at 700 yards. If this was mounted on a 15 MOA sloped base, you could probably get on paper at 900 yards (27.6 MOA up from 100 yards required), but not at 1000 yards.
My Leupold 6.5-20X (40mm objective) has 44 MOA of elevation adjustment. It could definitely be zeroed at 100 yards with a 150 MOA base, and probably could be zeroed with a 20 MOA base (though if the tolerances stack up against you, possibly not). With a 15 MOA base, there would be about 15 + 22 = 37 MOA of "up" adjustment available from 100 yards. This would be enough to get you to 1000 yards, but would likely run out just before 1070 yards.