My point is that the F/O with 3000 hours is not all that "low time". Also, I am fairly sure his stick and rudder skills were just fine, as were the AA 903 and the C-5 crew I discuss in my article. As for going through the articles, those are just off the top of my head, there were other problems in it.
Having spent time flying with a good variety of C-5 (and other USAF heavy) pilots when we were both transplanted into a third aircraft were were somewhat new to (King Air), I would argue that their stick and rudder skills were probably not "just fine" if they were typical. Most USAF heavy guys suffer from the same automation-induced atrophy of basic stick-and-rudder skills that 121 airline pilots can. The USAF mandates and standardizes the very same use/reliance on FMS and FGS/autoflight systems in the heavy world with the same rationale of safety and efficiency, and there is a predictable result on pilot basic hand flying skills and SA.
I was an instructor in the King Air, and guys would get into theater with lots of hours in their designated MWSs, but only a dozen or so hours in the King Air. When I would take them on their initial sorties in theater, I would mandate that they hand fly pretty much everything on the sortie outside of the actual mission orbit. You would be surprised how many pilots were extremely apprehensive about doing this, and they subsequently made the same types of execution errors that you see in basic flying training students; overcontrolling, undercontrolling, chasing airspeeds and altitudes and unable to maintain stable flight, failure to trim, lack of SA on all kinds of things. It was ugly....and a little humorous...and even a little sad. Most of them were pretty embarrassed and even got angry with me for "setting them up" (or any number of rationalizations for their pretty crappy hand flying). They would have a rough flight or two, and then they'd have the rust knocked off and be back to some semblance of actual flying skills.
This wasn't just my experience in this single situation, either. When I was an instructor at a training command base, there were a whole ration of heavy MWS pilots (the ones I'm thinking of were specifically C-17, EC-130, and KC-135 pilots) who had significant difficulty passing the instructor qualification for the basic trainer, the T-6. Yet again, their hands weren't as well "tuned" and their brains weren't working at a fast enough pace to make single-seat airmanship decisions (not to mention the types of decisions they'd have to make at the next level as actual instructors). This wasn't the norm for heavy MWS-sourced instructors, but just for comparison there were no fighter or bomber background pilots who were having these kinds of stumbles learning how to instruct in a
basic trainer.
None of this is because these pilots were idiots. These were all highly experienced, very knowledgeable, highly trained pilots who had made it through years of extremely competitive and selective programs to just become a military pilot in the first place. It was not a "talent" problem, but an "experience" problem. Stick-and-rudder is a perishable skill, and if you spend thousands of hours in the Flight Levels with the autopilot on, or flying STARs and SIDs using the FGS/autoflight, the connection between the brain and the hands to make the yoke and thrust levers do what you want them to do isn't as sharp as it may have been in the past (or, sadly, ever even been!). The connection between the eyes and ears and the decisionmaking part of the brain atrophies just as wickedly.
So, in the grand scheme, we are talking about a pilot's ability to handle a nonstandard situation using basic airmanship. As noted above, guys with automation-induced atrophy eventually got their groove back after some knocking off of the rust...but when you are talking about handling an emergency, there really isn't time for that recurrency to take place. It has to be sharp at the very instant the pilot needs to call on those skills to handle the emergency.
To put this in perspective, though, I suppose you have to qualify what it means to say that these pilots' "stick and rudder skills were just fine". Their skills may have been "just fine" enough to handle normal operations in the transport category utilizing primarily FMS and FGS systems to operate the aircraft. To me, that is not the correct measurement.