I'm totally unfamiliar with the Sauer 101 bedding system.
*Edit: ok, I had a look at it. It looks pretty straightforward, an alu block epoxied into the stock at the front, and nothing at the rear - or more precisely, it looks like the rear bedding block is an integral part of the trigger mech. It's far better than not having the alu bedding block there at all, but nothing approaching a full bedding job. It would still be entirely possible for the action to be stressed with that bedding system since there isn't a continuous bedding surface along the whole action length. That's what epoxy bedding will prevent.*
But.... when Ganderite reads a thread and comments, the smart man takes his advice. He's not just making a random suggestion, if there was another one to make, he'd make it.
As it happens, my current hobby horse is the .270 Win mentioned above. It's sitting in a B&C stock that - theoretically - should not need to be bedded nor really see improvement from doing so since it has a monolithic bedding block that the action sits on. Theoretically. The rifle shot excellently prior to bedding (the last two groups above were before I did so) but does indeed shoot ever so slightly better (read: more consistently) after bedding. It's safe to say that no rifle will be HURT by bedding it, you can only improve things. On the other hand, if you're not comfortable doing it yourself, I'd be inclined to spend the $300 on ammo and shoot more before I'd spend it on a gunsmith bedding job.
Like there's no replacement for displacement, there is NO substitute for trigger time. That includes dry fire practice too, btw...
If you haven't taken it apart yet, are you sure the action screws are tight and torqued correctly? I'm sorry, I didn't even think of it, but making sure the action is seated properly and screws are torqued correctly should be done before firing...