That was before I re-drilled one of my midnight scorchers with a 320 hook set drilling..love that ball on oil. It was a progression....the specific group of tournaments I had used that on..typically has 2 different patterns they use.....mainly they use I believe it is a "modified chameleon" pattern..although it always plays like a reverse block for me, and sometimes they use a long heavy flat pattern. I don't really move further inside on the lane and throw it out to just inside the oob and see it come back into the pocket..I don't generate enough natural recovery with my release for that to be a viable option for me. I do square up and play down and in....However on that particular pattern I couldn't play a straight up the 2nd arrow shot on it like I was doing in league back then...most everything would be too much on the backend and wouldn't hold pocket...balls like my lane #1 bullet, that I use for a spare ball, would hold pocket playing that 2nd arrow line but wouldn't finish. However I did find success with my midnight scorchers playing in the heavier OOB oil...at some tournaments or days of the same tournament the outside oil was heavier than other times , but for most people unplayable.....I kept going down in grit with one trying to see if I could get the ball to exit the oob without having to "baby" it..eventually I tried a 12 grit pad--it wasn't sandpaper, I found 12 grit pads online(fairly flexible, but not as much so as abralon & such) ...and at that grit with just a normal pin just outside of the ring finger drilling I could play straight up the oob and the ball would exit the oil but would roll out soo quickly that I would squarely hit the 2-4..was hoping before I threw shots with it that it would not only exit the oil , but make it to the 1-3 pocket. Didn't happen so I abandoned that experiment.
I really do like the 320 degree hook set drilling I found online a couple years ago..because I can get a violent move in the oil or oil handling if you will similar to how I would with the lower grits I used with the old drilling , but without having to go soo quite so rough in grits.
Brad