OK, here's my take. If you take a look at the Tikka action you will see that it is very enclosed.
=/=
If you look at the Savage website you'll see that their premium "Target Action" is also enclosed.
you could also look at that another way. compared to the Tikka, the Savage/Stevens action is very open - facilitating easier loading and the possibility of topping off the mag, both desirable qualities in a hunting rifle. the accuracy potential of both platforms is the same. yes, for a target rifle you could opt for a more enclosed action, but many competition rifles are still built on the old open Savage action.
which brings me to question whether or not the Tikka action is designed with a small, single port as an innovation, or as a method to reduce the cutting of the port with one machining operation as opposed to the 6-7 required for the Savage port.
considering that they both have the same potential for accuracy, then you could make the point that the Savage action is superior because it maintains the same accuracy potential but
also allows for easier loading and topping off of the mag.
As for the recoil lug all I can say is that it works just fine as is.
there is simply no way to defend the recoil lug. it might 'work ok', but it was hailed as a design feature. its only feature is to reduce the cost of production. one of the main points of the Tikka action that precision shooters attack is the recoil lug.
If Tikka was still making the older M55 & M65 rifles then you'd have to wonder where they would be priced.
good point, i didnt think of that.
still, its unfortunate that we probably wont be seeing more of those, as the trend is towards more T3-like rifles as evidenced by the new Sako A7 (aka Tikka T4).