I always enjoy playing around with older or less usual amplifier designs - even if only inside LTspice, not necessarily on a PCB.
The OP's schematic has two feedback paths from the output to the input, one of them after the output capacitor (these being single-rail designs). My attempts at simulating it resulted in it being a quite efficient 500KHz sinewave oscillator until I removed the feedback from the point between the output capacitor and the speaker.
I suspect the transistor models I was using were... too fast. But I also suspect it is inherent in the design - look at the multiple RC time constants in the signal paths, looking to tame it. I would not want to manually do the AC analysis of that.
Once you remove that mess, it's not too dissimilar to #8 above - and it actually had some pretty good THD specs - surprisingly to me, it came in at around the 0.002% mark measured with 20W @ 1KHz into 8ohm (resistive).
The move to differential (long tailed pair) input seems to have happened pretty rapidly. Much easier to design with now that it's effectively a high power op-amp. You can then add extra refinements if you want to get fancy - current source LTP load, current mirrors in the collectors, buffered VAS, cascoded VAS, fully complementary throughout, etc... oops geeking out