I'd have to say, Ilford has a pretty impressive B&W range of film. I don't shoot much B&W, mostly color, but I generally do shoot Ilford when it's B&W (the exception is in the IR film, where I typically shoot the Rollei IR400s).
Let's take a look at what you can get in the Ilford/Harman line from B&H (I'm only looking at 35mm here, since that's what I primarily shoot), traditional grain films first:
ISO 50 - Pan F
ISO 100 - Kentmere 100
ISO 125 - FP4+
ISO 200 - SFX
ISO 400 - Kentmere 400
ISO 400 - HP5+
In the T-grain type 35mm films, we have:
ISO 100 - Delta 100
ISO 400 - Delta 400
ISO 3200 - Delta 3200 (note this film has a true speed of 1000, but low contrast so it looks good when pushed to 3200).
And finally in the chromogenic films:
ISO 400 - XP2 Super
So Ilford/Harman has an offering for B&W film in box speeds ranging from 50 to 3200, including 2 100-speed films and 4 400-speed films. Contrast this with Kodak B&W emulsions, also available from B&H:
Traditional - 400TX
T-Grain - TMax 100
T-Grain - TMax 400
Chromogenic: BW400CN
And finally Fuji, available from B&H:
ISO 100 - Neopan Acros 100
ISO 400 - Neopan 400
So Ilford has 10 B&W films, Kodak has 4 B&W films, and Fuji has 2 B&W films. I dare say Harman is doing something right to be able to support that many B&W films! Would a true B&W IR film be a good thing to have? Sure, but not if it hurts Harman's ability to offer the impressive variety of film it already produces.