Yes, it actually does, because the value of his compensation, 98% or so of which is in stock, would be worth
over 10 times less right now if it were not for Tim Cook's performance as CEO. That makes a rather big difference, in my view.
It also changes the argument meaningfully in a second way: liquidity. Tim Cook can't just go sell all that stock right now, since that would cause a rather big panic and also rob him of a lot of its value. Which means he could not actually pay all those folks' salaries.
Whether my point is "interesting" is up to you. Whether it's factual isn't. It's factual.