I am new to Specialty pistols having just bought my TC Encore 15" 25-06 last year and my Contender with 12" 45-70, 10" 7 TCU, 10" 256 Win, and 14" 22lr this year (it is a sickness, but that is a whole different topic). Up until then most of my handgun hunting has been with revolvers. I have taken deer with .357 mag, 41 mag, 44 mag, and 45 LC along with hogs, heck,most years I get a hog with my Buckmark 22lr. Almost all were shot inside 50yrds because that was my self-imposed limit for the type of terrain I hunt. However I do know that the top of the red insert on my S&W 57 .41 puts me on at 100yrds, and the bottom of the insert is a little high at 200 yrds with the load that i regularly shoot in it, I know this because I like to mess with the LE guys at the range by whanging the gongs at distances they think are impossible with a 4" revolver. (don't ask how many rounds it took to home in on that 200 yrd plate!) Point is since starting to shoot SP's My idea of long range with a handgun has changed, 200 yrds with the scoped encore is a gimme, and 100 yrds with the 7tcu and 256 are easy even over the irons, and I am getting pretty consistent with the 45-70 to 100 but the recoil has a learning curve. Practice and preparation make the shot.
Lloyds claim of outshooting the rifle guys doesn't surprise me, take a trip to a range on a busy saturday before hunting season, and watch people shoot, while there are always an outstanding few, there is a bigger number who are Minute-of-backstop, these are usually the guys who just come out to fire a shot or two to check their scope and have been shooting the same box of ammo since 1992.
As far as the long shot in the video, it is beyond my capabilities, but kudo's to the shooter!!
and as far as ethics go, I have mine and you have yours. The reason we have laws is to draw a line that no-one should cross, any other "ethics" are self imposed. The Shooter didn't break any laws and made a clean kill, with an impressive shot, in my book , no foul. We should keep our ethics to ourselves where they belong.