That's a pretty good one: "hey, every time you line up next to me your sled dies, must be afraid of me!" Anyway, what I was thinking of was a non-resistor plug with a resistor cap. I can't imagine no resistor at all would work with EFI, but I wonder what would happen with either a resistor plug and a straight cap, or non-resistor plug with a resistor cap.
I've got an older (but still computerized) Mercedes that is designed specifically for non-resistor plugs, with a 1kOhm resistor at the end of the plug wire. On that engine, running resistor plugs causes more wear on the rest of the ignition system. Unfortunately – even for that engine – it's getting harder to find non-resistor plugs. It's a little counter-intuitive that more resistance could cause more wear. That may be a special case, but I mention it as an example where deviating from the way the system was designed causes problems. There is always some EMI any time you generate a spark, but increasing the resistance between the coil and tip of the spark plug reduces the noise. It's a trade-off between stronger spark and keeping the EMI at an acceptable level.
Getting back to sleds, I can't find anything to confirm that the newer motors run a resistor cap (in addition to a resistor spark plug), but I'm fairly confident they do. The talk about running non-resistor plugs and such is only something you'd do if you're trying to gain performance. There could be significant benefits for someone running a turbo, for one. You might be able to run a single resistor (in either the cap or the plug) without causing trouble, but it's hard to be sure without extensive testing. It could also be hard on the coil. Like I said, my sled, and I think most others run a resistor cap and plug. That may be more for safety margin and redundancy than out of necessity. If a sled is designed for two resistors, removing one isn't going to be nearly as drastic as going to no resistor or even going from one to none – that said, they wouldn't put two in there if they didn't think they needed it.