I feel having a sort of "template" could be an idea, but what's most important is that burninate requests really outline what led the OP to believe the tag needs to go.
I wouldn't be surprised if there were plenty of cases where a tag didn't quite fit under the guidelines you list, but still happens to be a bad tag that needs to be burninated.
All I feel a request needs is justification, reasoning that the tag is bad:
I feel the [tagname] tag needs to be burninated. It has X questions and many of them are off-topic/misusing the tag/etc. I have also found that the tag {is ambiguous/adds nothing to the post/is a meta-tag/etc.} and is not a good tag on the site. {Insert possible other findings showing the tag is bad and needs to go.}
Granted, that's just a generic idea, but it does something that a number of requests I've seen don't at first: Gives real reasons the OP feels the tag should go. Yes, my generic example uses criteria given in When to burninate, but the OP could have found some other criteria not on that list and used that as a motivator for getting rid of the tag.
The important thing should be the OP of the request showing us why the tag should go, and not just saying "it's bad cause it's a bad tag." This could potentially be "encouraged" through the tag wiki excerpt, or (if the team feels this is a big enough issue, I certainly don't think it's that bad) with an informational pop-up message when you select the "burninate" tag. Otherwise, we can simply request this information in the comments, and clean the comments up when the post has been updated.
The OP should also take time to consider alternative fixes for the tag: Synonyms that can be made, if the tag simply needs cleaned up, if the wiki and excerpt could be edited to make the point of the tag clearer (usually in combination with a clean up), if splitting the tag into two or more better-targetted tags, etc. However, if the OP fails to make these considerations, other users can at least suggest this in an answer, along with their reasoning for the alternative. This particular point doesn't have to fall solely on the OP, but it would be most beneficial if the OP considers these options and even possibly mentions why they wouldn't work.
If we request a feature that would "fix a problem" according to the requester, we usually ask for proof of the problem to begin with. This shows us that the effort for the "fix" would be worth it, and not just a waste of time. Why should burnination requests be different?
As for titles having a specific format, they already have a sort of "unofficial" one. Puns have been the norm for burninate requests for a bit, and if a request is posted without a pun, suggestions and edits are made to correct this.