I hate to repeat it again, but it's not because TMAX 100 is better at EI 80 when you develop it in coffee and alka-seltzer that it means it's not an ISO 100 film.
Being ISO 100 means only that under ISO circumstances (which are extremely well controlled and VERY different from any real world photo situation), the film speed point will be 100.
So again, the "relative" speed of ISO 100 films to each other is a moot point: they're all ISO 100 under ISO circumstances.
There are much more important differences between those films than speed.
First, there is spectral sensitivity. B&W films react differently to colour, and some films will render a yellow more light than other ones.
Second is characteristic curve. Most mid-speed films tend to have a rather straight curve, but there can be minute variations in either the shadows, midtones, or the highlights.
Finally, grain type (modern v. traditional) has an influence on the look and the perceived graininess and apparent sharpness.