From a "garden shed mechanic" point of view, as you have a small (ish) light (ish) sort of boat to start with, coupled with a 102motor (in varying power outputs) as others have mentioned if outright speed is what's important , why not try polishing your hull first before you experiment with props. Sounds daft i know, but every little bit helps. Should be an easy job on your "tinnie".The less drag the boat has the more effort the engine can put into making extra revs into the prop.
A "re-worked" prop may end up with quite a noticeable difference in outright performance compared to a standard unfinished and dirty prop! I've noticed that an awful lot of these seagull props are quite a long way off perfection. Blades of unequal length, 1 or 2 blades of unequal weight, blades of unequal pitch all add up to something pretty nasty as a prop. Then there's cavitation where the prop loses it's grip on the water (a bit like the tyres on your car losing traction) None of these imperfections will help in the speed stakes.
However great or small those "improvements" are will be yours and yours alone. Ask a racer for the full in depth explanation in extracting the very last ounce of GO GO GO.
Polishing is easy, the other bits are more secretive and perhaps best explained in depth by someone that knows.
I personally wouldn't bother with a 5 bladed hydrofan as i'm not convinced a bone stock 102 has enough power in reserve to turn one of those.
I would stick with the more common props available e.g. the bowtie, 3 bladed "meat cleaver" as i call it,the 4 bladed hydrofan or if you can find one a proper 4 bladed cloverleaf type. All of them will vary in pitch and surface area, some will work better than others. Testing is the only way you'll find out which works the best on your little boat.
If you're going in "test mode" for your wet meet, why not try attaching a tacho meter of some description to your ht lead to see how many revs the motor is making. Record the results noting which prop was fitted at the time of test along with a speed measurement from your gps and this should give you some credible data to work from.
I'd be very interested to know how you get on with it as a fellow 102 enthusiast
Jon