Even with a Commando-based race bike, it is usually more midrange torque you are looking for. The gearbox is a torque multiplier. A close ratio gearbox combined with high overall gearing and the heavy crank gives fastest acceleration. Top speed is largely irrelevant, but depends on how fast you can get around the corners and into the next straight.
Hot cams rely on resonance in the exhaust system to work properly. Any back pressure will usually stifle them to a large extent. With normal mufflers, you will still get more go, but to get the max you usually run into noise problems.
Ashley on this forum uses a 2S Combat cam in his 850 and says it performs well, but there is no way of assessing before and after from what he has said. Most guys when they fit hot cams are changing more than one thing at a time. So the effect of changing the cam on it's own becomes largely unknown.
In my Seeley, I use a normal 850 cam but slightly modified. It performs excellently with the 2 into 1 exhaust system - fast enough to be competitive in historic races. But it is optimised and it is too loud. The 2S Combat cam would be better because the exhaust valve opening point would be later when the cam is advanced to suit the exhaust system. If the exhaust valve opens too early before bottom dead centre, the noise levels can be horrendous, even though you might get better performance.