I'm going to jump in here and say you should just start reloading. If you are on a budget, just get a full length sizing die, a seating die, a Lee challenger press, the Lee case trimming set up, and a used chargemaster.
You can win matches with that reloading setup. If money is no object, obviously you can buy better stuff, but you do not need even $1k in reloading equipment for prs. A lot of us have stupid money wrapped up in this sport, but reloading equipment is the last place to invest unless you make gobs of $$$ so time is worth more than $$$. A lot of guys that are good will say you need this and that. It's because we love this. I started on a meager budget and quit a job I loved to make more money to play prs. You only know for sure if you like it after you get into it.
What you need to be successful is a gun that will shoot .3s-.4s for 200 rounds without cleaning and control over the ammo variation. You also want to minimize recoil to maximize what you see down range. I would invest money in this order:
Ammo/components
Training/range time
Scope
Barrel/chamber job
The rest is gravy. One thing I will stress. You hear the 3 Bs, brass, barrels, and bullets. For the easy button to a rifle that will allow you to be competitive, don't skimp there. The only cheap bullets right now anyway are Hornady BTHP Match. They will get you there if you get a good lot and sort by oal. Bergers are easy, just take them out of the box and seat them. If you have the means, buy enough components to burn out the barrel when you screw it on the action.
Practice will get you way further than gear in prs. I would shoot a savage rifle with a $1000 scope to afford to practice a lot if needed.
Lastly, this has already been stated, but if you can afford it, buy the good stuff. If you decide you want out, you can sell it to the rest of us fools for little to no loss in the px.