I'd answer O if I understand the phrase "Which car's yaw velocity increases most quickly?" Correctly.
I agree with you venkyhere, in that a chassis set for high speed has to have a "latent " understeer characteristic, if it's a high power rear wheel driven layout, to ultimately be cancelled out (the natural understeer balance) by application of torque.
One that has a knife edge response to steering becomes ultimately slower as you can't use much torque before it starts to rotate too far, that's from my experience in driving various different arrangements.
I would say that at the far reaches of pace in long corners, how much throttle you can apply is proportional to how much "understeer" exists through that period of operation.
There's clearly a different view on just how much understeer warrants that word in "layman" discussion on here.