Having killed a coues every year but two since the early 80s, I commend you for getting such a nice buck.
When first starting to hunt coues I realized the bigger ones kept their distance. Without rangefinders the only way to connect with them was to use a faster bullet to flatten the trajectory. At the time the only rifle I owned was a 284 win. I chose the, new at the time, original Barnes X 100 gr bullet. Got it to go 3600 fps and it helped. Only problem was it rarely killed the deer but did tend to stop them. When I would catch up to the deer had to finish it off. I eventually moved on to bullets that expanded more to make larger wound cavities. Only legislation would make me go back to a mono bullet.
I have to agree with others, as much as I loved Leupolds I quit using them for big game hunting. I had three break just before or during a coues hunt. Typically an erector would break. IMO Should you ever get a chance to get out West again, where shots are long, you might want to get a more reliable scope before a failure in the field ruins the hunt.
When first starting to hunt coues I realized the bigger ones kept their distance. Without rangefinders the only way to connect with them was to use a faster bullet to flatten the trajectory. At the time the only rifle I owned was a 284 win. I chose the, new at the time, original Barnes X 100 gr bullet. Got it to go 3600 fps and it helped. Only problem was it rarely killed the deer but did tend to stop them. When I would catch up to the deer had to finish it off. I eventually moved on to bullets that expanded more to make larger wound cavities. Only legislation would make me go back to a mono bullet.
I have to agree with others, as much as I loved Leupolds I quit using them for big game hunting. I had three break just before or during a coues hunt. Typically an erector would break. IMO Should you ever get a chance to get out West again, where shots are long, you might want to get a more reliable scope before a failure in the field ruins the hunt.