It should have the grade inscribed as a suffix to the bearing identifier Max. You're correct, the clearance will decrease with temperature, which is also a function of speed and load. High clearance bearings are also used in low speed/temp applications with a high interference fit.
Many moons ago I was racing an AT3MX Yamaha on dirt track and was doing the ignition timing one night before a race meeting and experienced exactly the same problem as you described. I pulled the motor down that night, got new bearings the next day, fitted them up and had exactly the same amount of movement - lesson learnt.
Having said that I'm not saying 100% that yours are OK, it just seems unlikely that they are shot, particularly given the fact that everything was in good shape when you assembled it (I assume the crank was true), coupled with the quality oil and low amount of run time.