Dan, others: I've gotten dragged down a few rabbit holes about what oil is best, yada, yada...
I'm a Mech E and taken an interest in oil since I started driving almost 50 years ago. I've read serious SAE papers about tribology and the additives (especially ZDDP) and base stocks of oil. I've read analyses that say Redline is among the best, and analysis that say it's fine but nothing special, and analyses of other popular brands.
The more I learn, the more I learn that I don't know as much as I thought about how oils really perform. BUT, I've also learned that even vaunted experts don't really know either. So, I'm not alone! And I've learned that the particular ingredients are not as important as how the additive package is balanced and optimized. Thus, "1500ppm Zinc" (like in Valvoline V1) does not mean much on its own.
The engineers who really know how well oils work in their engines are beavering way in the development departments of major engine manufacturers, and oil manufacturers, and they don't much talk about their specific findings because those are proprietary. AND, oil formulations change frequently, both because of changing API and manufacturer specifications, and to reduce cost, use multiple alternative suppliers of chemicals, etc. Thus, the oil with the SAME label today as two years ago may be subtly or significantly different.
Therefore, the best information you can get about how a particular oil performs in YOUR engine is through regular oil sample analysis. Period. Then there are religious arguments about which oil lab does the best job and measures the right parameters...
I use Blackstone because that's what I have used in the past. Another thing I have learned (I hope!) about this black art is that a snapshot in time is not very useful (unless the engine is in bad shape). It's the trends over time that matter most, so you should use the same lab consistently. That's the rule in general aviation too.
If you want to know how well the oil in your 1400whp car--or any other car-- holds up and prevents wear, do oil analysis, and try several different oils over time. But my guess is that you don't drive that car enough to try oils over, say, 20,000 mile periods. Thus, I advise you to stick to one oil, but pull samples at some regular basis to see how it's holding up and whether wear metals are increasing.