It won't increase your power significantly at all. The top end will only take what it needs, which will be not close to the power available. You are just making a complication with zero benefit and actually a downside, since the amps will have different sensitivities. 125 watts versus 200 watts is less than 3db. This idea of a speaker needing power to make it shine, is also nonsense. A speaker will shine if it is any good, if itis lousy, it will sound lousy whatever you drive them with.
I have taken a look at those speakers, and the design is not promising at all. It is a three way with 8" woofer, 6" mid and a tweeter. Crossover points are 100 Hz and 3.3 KHz. Having designed many speakers over the years, I can tell that is trouble with a big T. A passive crossover at 100 Hz is just inviting all sorts of problems. In addition it will make it hard, if not impossible to integrate with a sub.
Not only that the speaker is rolling off 24 db per octave at 75Hz, as ported speakers generally roll of 24 db per octave, if they are QB4 boxes, which this obviously is. It is 11 db down by 50 Hz. To top it off there is a 7.5 db peak at 100 H right at the crossover point.
The choices some designers make just never ceases to amaze me.
I can not find an impedance curve, but from the design I bet it is not pretty, and could quite likely be an amp buster with a crossover at 100 Hz.