aa-fuel,
I run a 9-second 23T altered with an inline six and where you will have problems is on burn outs and on shut down. You will see your oil pressure drop to ZERO from the negative G's. The first time this is really disconcerting. I now have a trick racing pan and guess what - I still lose oil pressure after I go through the lights, so I just let the car coast down gradually and watch the oil pressure slowly drop to zero and then, when I am well under 100 MPH I just kill the engine and roll off the track before restart. Sometimes in the heat of competition I let the engine comtinue to run on zero oil pressure and so far there has been no damage to the bearings after hundreds of runs. I don't know if that would hold true for your 292 though.
Also, if you assume 2 G's off the starting line and do a force analysis diagram you will realize the surface of the oil in your pan is at a 60 degree angle to the ground, meaning the back half of your crank is completely anchored in frothing oil. This is where a good racing pan can help you. Because our oil pans are much longer than a V8 oil control is a much bigger issue.
So I guess I recommend a good racing pan, or at least deepening and baffeling your stock one. A stock pan may work - it just isn't going to be optimal. Good luck. Post pics of that bad boy.