Dont agree Ben,
I know its too old school for you guys, but Bill Nicholson the factory tuner at BMC and MG in the 60s when MGBs and Minis were winning major world rallies and races, was given the 3 bearing crank engines of the time as the basis for his works cars.
By relatively simple tuning, opening the ports, enlarging the valves, raising the compression ratio by skimming the head and changing carburetors for larger capacity ones he could double the power of the engines.
But they became fragile and regularly dropped their bearings or put a rod through the side.
They were regularly thrashed by the Triumph Tr4, which had a 5 bearing crank and block straight out of a Commer lorry. Heavy as lead, but strong
Bill was instrumental in having the BMC A and B Series 5 bearing blocks put into production (this was gp5 days so production profiles) and almost over night he doubled the power again and the reliability with it. And these were still not cross flow 8 port heads and they had cast cranks.
Triumph gave up motor racing after that.
The group N cars where it was body silhouette only required were even more powerful.
My Dad had a Nicholson MGB which had the steel crank 8 port cross flow head and twin Webber Dcoe 40s, it was developed for group N road racing as they called it then (production sports cars)
Really quick car for the day and so reliable the Northamptonshire Police had them as motorway patrol cars and they could out run an E type and still get home for tea and tiffen.
The Hampshire Police had fuel injected Rudspeed Volvo B180s that were supposed to be faster than a Scotsman who's round it was, and they were never out of the workshops having rods popped back in big oily holes, because the block /crank was so weak.
They were fast but you could lose them in a Ford Anglia with a full tank.