More than a few articles talk about the crank trying to pull the rod in half yanking on the piston after TDC.
Actually, it's the piston/pin/ring assembly that's trying to pull the rod in 1/2.
Long ago (and far away!) we ran out of a top-notch Chevy shop (sorry!) in Des Plaines, IL (Pro Motor Engineering) which later moved to N.C. to build NASCAR engines and off-shore race boat engines. Anyway, Jerry Baker, a real legend in the Midwest, advised that when hitting the finish line, to easily let off the gas and NOT snap the throttle closed until the rpms dropped.
More than a theory, he noted that a number of NHRA gasser and Comp/Elim SBC engines they built and serviced (these were 10,000 rpm + engines class-winning engines btw) lost a rod or two not under power but when the driver snapped off at the line. He theorized that the cushion of air above the piston left the building, so to speak, when the throttle plates closed and allowed the rod/piston assembly to free-wheel.
We and other fellow racers from this shop did follow his advice and to my knowledge, never suffered a blown rod at the finish line (some did drop a rod but while under power).