Not to be picky.....but recoil control is the name of the game.
I once tried to "manage" recoil in my 26" CVA shooting ~500+ grain boolits. They were from a Lee mold that was meant for a 50-70cal. I was shooting 90gr of Pyro P in it. I called it my 50-90 project. I thought it would be easier to sight in the gun on a primose group therapy rest. Not quite like a lead sled, but ended up providing too much resistance.
What happened was I would get groups ALL over the place. I couldn't figure out what the heck was going on. Finally, I realized(by way of some members on here) the recoil was too much to trap in a contraption like that. I forget the exact comments, but it was along the lines of too much rearward resistance will make the barrel recoil elsewhere, which in turn would send bullets off in different directions.
I did not put two and two together back then to realize what was going on. I simply took it out of the rest and sighted it in off bags. That worked perfectly and I did not give the barrel jumping around much thought after that.
Maybe its the little things like that over time which have finally put the puzzle together for me. To control the recoil straight back is the best, and at the very least the same direction each time, that way the bullet leaves the same place each time and is not directed elsewhere.