That might be why in my original post I said "as far as I know". Since you do claim to know it, then please describe this obscure manouver (NADA on a Google search) Mr. Holier than Thou.
It's not obscure but 'combination maneuver'.
From Air Force "T-38 PRECISION AEROBATICS" manual:
204.
CLOVERLEAF
a. Description
The Cloverleaf maneuver combines the first half of a Barrel Roll with the last half of a Loop.
b. General
This maneuver combines the smooth coordinated rolling control of the Barrel Roll and the pull
control of the basic Loop. It will help develop your timing, planning and coordination. You will
start with one (one of the four petals) of this maneuver at a time only until you are introduced to
the Combination Maneuver, after which you may do four series back to back (for a full four-leaf
clover). You must keep clearing yourself throughout the entire series. Review the Description
and General paragraphs for both the Barrel Roll and the Loop in the Contact FTI.
c. Procedures
(1) Transition to aerobatic cruise and complete the Aerobatic Checklist.
Commence a clearing turn and roll out perpendicular to a section line. Pick a prominent
reference point on the horizon 90o to either side of the nose, in the direction you intend to
perform the maneuver.
(2) Commence the maneuver by smoothly raising the nose while keeping the wings
level. As the exhaust stacks pass the horizon, roll and pull so that the nose travels around in an
arcing path towards the selected 90E checkpoint. After 45E of turn the angle of bank should be
90E and the nose will be at its highest point during the maneuver (approximately 5560 degrees
above the horizon).
(3) Continue rolling the aircraft at a constant rate until in a wings level, inverted
attitude, heading directly at the 90E reference point on the horizon. Your nose should be
slightly above the horizon and the airspeed should be between 90 and 100 knots. Fly the
aircraft through the inverted position, stopping the roll at wings level.
(4) Tilt your head back and visually locate the opposite horizon. Correct with
aileron as necessary to maintain the wings parallel to the horizon. Check the nose in relation to
the section line (opposite from your 90E reference point) while correcting for directional
deviations as necessary by adjusting the rudder inputs.
(5) Airspeed will reach its slowest point at the top of the loop. The greatest amount
of right rudder input will therefore be required at this point in order to maintain balanced flight.
Maintain positive G-loading and wings parallel to the horizon.
(6) Allow the nose to fall through the opposite horizon, adjusting the amount of aft
stick pressure to maintain a constant pitch rate. Fly the aircraft's nose along the section line,
relaxing right rudder pressure as airspeed is quickly regained.
(7) Continue to relax right rudder pressure as the airspeed increases in the dive and
smoothly increase aft stick pressure as necessary to maintain a constant pitch rate. The recovery
will again require approximately 3.5 Gs, so remember to resume the AGSM. Quickly scan the
altimeter during recovery in order to return to straight and level flight at approximately the same
altitude and airspeed, but offset 270E from the original heading, tracking along your section
line.
(8) Commence the next "leaf" (if applicable) as described above. As you recover
from the even-numbered maneuvers, you will fly perpendicular (vice parallel) across your
section line.
Cloverleaf applies to AHII as well. Best example is "Dedalos merge". Flat merge turn -> half barrel roll -> half loop