I think the layout is not optimal for what you are looking for. A 4.25 pin with only 15 mph for a high end ball, plus the lower rg, usually equals to more roll and less backend. My suggestion would have been to put the pin at 5 inches and kick the mass right of the thumb about 2 inches. That would put the pin above the bridge or close to above your middle finger and the cg would have been under your ring ringer. That would increase your drilling angle and help that ball pop on the backend more.
A guy on my team got one drilled up and with the factory polish on it, the ball squirted like crazy on oil so he uses it now when the lanes have burned up a little and the Revenge and Nightmare are too much. We did similar layouts with all 3 balls so he starts with the Nightmare, then balls down to the Revenge, and then the Terror once the other two start hooking too much too soon. Because he has gotten several DV8 balls, I have gotten pretty familiar with them. His axis is around 4 5/8 by 1 up and ball speed around 15-16 at release. He has a Nightmare at 4 inch pin, mass stacked, no weight hole and we had to do a surface adjustment to get it to roll good. We took it to 1000 abralon with Rough Buff, no high gloss and now the ball is stronger overall than box finish. However, he cannot get deep with it because that 4 inch pin layout makes the ball want to read too soon and has no angle in the backend to carry the corners. Thats when we go to the Revenge with the 5 inch pin and surface at 2000 with Rough Buff.
My issue with pro shop guys, is that when someone has a slower ball speed and drilling higher end stuff, why put the pin in a rolly position when the ball is designed for backend? That makes the ball really weak on the backend. Put the pin around 5 inches to help the ball get down the lane and then adjust the cover to get the desired backend (shiny for flippy and 2000 or 4000 abralon no polish for controlled reaction).