Such a topic always goes out of control faster than a "hard hit" deer. If you put a bullet through both lungs and/or heart, it's hard for them to make it 100 yards. It's more a factor of time than distance. A buck with a running start and nothing but open field made it about 125 yards before falling over. That's the farthest I've witnessed with a gun that didn't have other factors. Most of the time the problem is the hunter bumping those deer. If you immediately after a shot go out to look at the spot of the shot, you will bump that deer, and they will keep running instead of stopping or slowing to catch their breath. It's not as big a deal with strong firearms, but especially bow hunting, a deer often goes a little while after a knife blows through their lungs. That's often where you hear of 200-300 yard tracking jobs of well hit deer is bow hunters who bump deer.
Just wait though, someone will come by with some extraordinary story yet. There's even a guy on this forum who swears up and down he shot a doe and "blew a baseball size chunk of the heart out", and found that deer a mile away. Of course in reality he made a bad shot, and some poor hunter who did make a good shot is forever wondering where his went.