One of my only experiences with a bent rod was where a piston disintegrated in one of my engines - all that was left was the pin, but it had hit the smashed up piston pieces and the rod had become bent. What I think you are calling the H style, and Taylor is calling the 90 degree orientation, would have helped a bit, but the rod probably would still have bent. I once made some very large billet CNC machined 7075 Aluminum rods for a guy with a turbocharged pulling tractor. I made them with a simple rectangular section, but he had a detonation and one got bent. So it's not true to say that rods always fail in tension due to inertia forces, although my general impression is that racing guys do usually have tension failures. If you run the numbers, however, it is not obvious, at least to me, that this should necessarily always be the case. It also seems that the buckling strength is generally likely to be less than the tensile strength.