Again, this just plainly isn’t so tbh. A different skill set isn’t less skill. At all.
Just as AFL and rugby players have gone to the US and played different sports doesn’t detract from the skills in those sports. Mark and Steve Waugh were junior representative soccer players, Alex Xarey was in an AFL club system - all went on to play international cricket. The fact they switched sports to do so doesn’t detract from the skills associated with cricket. This is junk logic
Except that wasn't the logic. Or even remotely an exact parallel.
Steve and Mark Waugh started playing soccer at a very young age, getting some of the best coaching in Australia at the time at Blacktown City, and developing the fine motor skills involved for years and years, while also concurrently playing cricket. They didn't switch sports, they got really good at both over 5-10 years at a formative age when your neuroplasticity and ability to adapt to new skills is at its highest, and then dropped one and focussed on the other. So did people like Alex Keith who grew up playing both footy and cricket, and Josh Rachele who grew up playing both footy and soccer, before dropping out of the Melbourne City academy to play AFL.
The fact that people like Pike and Cox can learn an entirely new sport at 23 and 24 (yes, that's 23 and 24), with no previous exposure or experience of it, and attain the skills to an AFL standard in 18 months later suggests that those skills, even honed for an elite level, are pretty accessible. Something like that would be just about unthinkable in those other sports I mentioned (which didn't include gridiron btw). Do you think it's in any way possible for someone to come from a non-cricket playing country and learn to bowl for the first time at 23 and even make it to grade cricket in five years, let alone 18 months?
The core skills of footy - kicking, handballing and marking - are not that difficult to grasp. It doesn't take a long time to learn to kick a decent drop punt or handball the ball, The fine motor skills involved in dribbling a soccer ball, or dribbling a basketball to even a moderate standard are a world away from that. Learning to bat and bowl even adequately takes a fair bit of mastery. Leaving the Cox, and Pyke examples aside, I've played all those sports and the difference was obvious.
I've played casual footy at school and in the park against guys who were in elite junior Aussie Rules programs and what they were doing with the ball wasn't terribly different to what the rest of us were doing, except they made crisper contact with the ball when they kicked. Obviously there's skill and repetitive practice involved, but the main difference was they could outjump us and run rings around us with their outstanding athleticism. I've played competitive footy and found the same to be true of the best guys there. I've played soccer and basketball against guys who were semi-professionals in the state league and what they could do with the ball even playing at that level was breathtaking. And it would have taken a lot more than 18 months to learn.
Have you played much footy?