Well if you still want that Citori 28ga, and you can't live with the looks of the Savage,
then look at Tikkas. They are not that much more money over the Savage, and
I can tell no difference in the average accuracy of these rifles. I have two Tikkas,
and two Savages. All 4 guns are sub MOA. I have a TIkka Whitetail Hunter SS/Lam,
in 25-06Rem, a Tikka T-3 blued/syn, in .223 Rem., a Savage 16 ss/syn, in .22-250 Rem,
and a Savage Striker in .308 Win. Yes the Tikkas have more style, and a very
smooth bolt, and very good fit and finish, but when I walk down to the targets,
after firing groups from these rifles, I can see very little difference. My next two
rifle purchases will be a .20 cal, and a .338 WM. For the .338 WM, I couldn't tell
you which rifle I will end up with, but it will be a Tikka, or a Savage. For the .20 cal,
I will probably buy an old Savage, and re-barrel it, re-stock it, and drop in a
aftermarket trigger. That is one big advantage of the Savage. It is so simple
to re-barrel, headspace, and even change bolt faces, that it makes an excellent
gun to fool around with for wildcats.
Since I think I am reading that you want a stylish rifle, then rather than spend
the money for a Sako, just buy a Tikka, which has a Sako barrel, and put the
savings towards that Citori...Nice choice by the way. I have a 28 gauge,
Red Label, that I won at a DU banquet. I love that little gun for grouse, and
woodcock. Someday, I will add a Citori 20 gauge, to the scattergun collection,
for pheasants, and long flushing grouse conditions.
Squeeze.