Kinda true. Airliners are so big and heavy, and considering we only have to land in a couple thousand foot long area, that kind of throttle jockeying really isn’t necessary. For me, it’s just how I learned and am worse than most. I got a funny comment from a jump seater once, “man, you sure jockey the throttles a LOT, but I didn’t see the airspeed change a knot!” I took it as a high complement!
even in light civil airplanes I fully configure abeam, no final flaps crossing the threshold here, and tend to jockey the throttle more than most. I finally just quit trying to change who i am!
And then there’s the venerable MD-88... The yoke only moves the trim tabs. So TONS of stick jockeying to manage breakout forces to fly very precisely. I’m a hoot to watch on a gusty day. We always referred to it as fighting snakes in the cockpit.
So I transition to 75’s, a VERY gentlemanly airplane. I’m shooting down the chute doin my thang, airplane feels like a donkey cart on railroad tracks, check airman just grabs the yoke and immobilizes it, jet gets dead smooth, and he just yells, “damn 88 guys!” I’m like, well I’ll be, guess it isn’t so gusty after all... hmmm... hehe