You missed final check of fuel on both, final takeoff trim check, setting mixture for high altitude (heh), prop cycle and oil pressure drop, carb heat, vacuum gauge, voltage regulator failure indicator check (turn off Alt half of master ) and making sure the primer is in and locked, and an idle check.
My 182 flow starts at the floor, fuel selector, final takeoff trim check, then hand up to the throttle to 1700, eyeballs to the oil pressure gauge/engine gauges, then hand moves right to the mixture control to set that, and from there goes alllllll the way to the left wall... stopping at the prop control, carb heat, alt air, eyes to the vacuum pump in the green passing center of yoke (that's where mine lives),? key switch/mag check, master alt loop check off/on, and primer. Since my vacuum is slightly below green at idle I usually check the DG on the way by also while the RPM is up, but that's final checked on the runway at lineup so it's semi-optional in the runup flow. The last item is throttle to idle to make sure it will idle without dying, then back to 800-900 RPM. That got added after I flew a 172 that had the idle set wrong and the prop stopped six feet in the air on landing. Glad I didn't do power off stalls that day. Guess we must have taxied with the throttle above idle and gotten a departure clearance without a stop at the hold-short line back when I went only back down to 800-900 like the POH calls for on most airplanes. Would have gotten to practice my restart flow for real.