The turbine power extraction is reduced and therefore the MGU-H power recuperation goes roughly to zero
I think if the MGUH went to 100 kW motoring (full electric supercharger mode) they would have said so. Fact is the turbine is still making some power - enough to drive the compressor in fact.
It is a fact that the wastegate can control turbine output from zero to maximum by varying wastegate opening. It is also well documented that considerable exhaust energy is available to the turbine without significant pumping penalty during the exhaust stroke. There are two main factors involved.
1. There is significant exhaust energy available to the turbine during "blowdown" while the piston is still descending on power stroke (480* - 540* in the diagram below). Flow is "choked" so there is no increase in flow if the pressure in the port is reduced eg by opening the wastegate fully. Choked flow persists through the early part of the exhaust stroke (540* - 650* in the diagram) so again, there is no reduction in pumping loss if the wastegate opening is increased. So the remainder of the exhaust stroke (650* - 720*) is the only period where pumping loss can be reduced by additional wastegate opening.
2. With appropriate wave tuning, the port pressure during the late stages of the exhaust stroke can be reduced to significantly less than the average exhaust manifold pressure ("manometer reading" dashed line in the diagram). It is likely that the wastegate only needs to be opened far enough to lower the average exhaust pressure to some value - say 1 Bar - to reduce exhaust pumping loss almost to the same level as would be achieved by opening the wastegate fully and bypassing the turbine completely.
We know that the exhaust header is designed to preserve blowdown pulses up to the turbine - use of a divided turbine housing and plumbing individual runners all the way to the turbine housing, with three even-firing cylinders sharing a turbine volute. It is not a "blowdown only" turbine but like any serious racing (or even street) turbo application these days, it makes use of blowdown energy to allow a lower average exhaust back pressure for the same turbine power output.