Please do not take offense. I am not known to be the best speaker.
You are not doing a very good repair. It will not be structural and it will just look bad. You are only using cloth when mat is needed. From the resin dripping off I can see you too much for a sound repair. I also do not see that you have tapered the areas back and have it down to glass not on the gel coat. You need to take away the broken off parts and build it all up.
You need to grind it down to a taper, you should take off the handle but that might not be wise for other reasons. You need to start with a large layer of mat then large layer of cloth then 2 layers of mat. Yes that is how far it needs to be ground down. You wet out the glass on some card board then transfer it to the boat. It must not be dripping wet!!
The bottom will be a bit of pain to do. You will need a dremel to grind back around the curve. You will need to be using mat to make up the compound curve. You will also need to make smaller pieces to get round the curves some.
Go watch some videos on youtube to get a better idea of what to do. The area you are trying to work is a bit harder to come out right. That area will take a beating as it already has so you need to make it sound or it will just break again.
Here is what I recently did on a newer hull for the club. Keep in mind it is not a perfect repair. The boat is pretty beat up and a pretty repair would have taken a few days to do and I did not have the time. It needed some repair at the bow face that required me opening up the top to put more structure inside. I had the problem of trying to do that curve around edge found on the newer Sunfish. I ended up using a rubber hose as a form.
I am just in the early learning stages of glass work. I have undone some repairs that look like what you are doing and know that it is not a good repair.