I don't know any racers (personally) that side gap their plugs... man, that would take a lot of bending. However, most racers "index" their plugs... getting the ground electrode out of the way of the mixture. I've seen no studies that can verify the benefits, but if it can't hurt....
Increasing the gap, however, may present more of the "working fluid" to the spark, but it can increase ionization voltage to the pont where external insulation can break down (giving intermittent misfires,,,, dropping cylinders, if you will) or reducing spark duration which will result in LESS mixture being exposed to the spark, resulting in misfire. Increasing the voltage required to ionize the spark gap can also be detrimental to the coilpack.
Without a solid understanding of the effect of magnetic fields moving across conductors, it can be difficult to appreciate what really happens in an ignition system. This is a very, very complex interelation of events and side effects. Forward EMF, back EMF... collapsing magnetic fields inducing a voltage that creates a magnetic field that induces a voltage that creates a magnetic field that induces a...... You may not notice it in normal operation, but the engineers have spent many hours in producing a combination that will both please the customer, exhibit satisfactory emissions standards and and yield a production run that will appease the CAFE gods.
We wont mention the diagnostic nightmare that a "customized" spark plug gap can enhance. It's your car and your electronics... but even after 30+ years making this my living, I fail to see the sense in "taxing" my equipment as a standard operating parameter.