Many years ago one of my pals decided to build an exhaust syphon crankcase scavenging system into his nitro funnycar motor. He ditched the zoomies and built a set of 4-1 headers that ran under the length of the car, tapped into the collector, and took suction at the valve cover breathers. Boy, did it work; he sucked every drop of oil right out of the motor and blew it out the pipes, onto the track behind him in a blaze of flaming 60wt. One run and done. When the oil pressure hit zero it threw the rods out, but the good news is there wasn't 12 quarts of burning oil under the body causing a fire there...
FYI all modern nitro funnycars run a dry sump oil system with a windage tray, the dragsters are wet sump deep pans also with a windage tray. I was involved with one car running a 4-stage oil scavenge pump that appeared to show promise - on occasion.
We know there is always positive pressure in the oil pan, it is monitored, and there is an ignition kill switch that shuts the motor off in the event 15psi is registered, ie, a burnt piston, but that is primarily to keep oil off the race track.
In these motors it is fairly typical for the top compression rings to be a Dykes 'L' shaped where the astronomical pressure of combustion gas can get behind and force them against the cylinder walls.
While a 1% performance gain may seem small, I know of at least one professional Top Fuel team that places such a high value on their piston rings sealing that between-run maintenance includes replacing all 8 sleeves. BRAND NEW SLEEVES EVERY SINGLE RUN. PERIOD. They are also pitching the rings every run as well, so every fresh rack of slugs has only new rings in those new sleeves.