I did a little checking and found the runway at Oklahoma City is … basically oriented north-south. The winds [Wednesday] afternoon at the surface were from the southwest at 20-28 mph, gusting to 40-47 mph. Winds in the lowest 1,000 to 3,000 ft above the surface were also from the southwest at about 40-50 mph.

Planes always land into the wind, so he was approaching the runway from the north. The pilot will try to fly directly into the wind for as long as possible, then turn at the last moment to line up to the runway for landing. That’s exactly what he did in this case. He was probably dealing with a crosswind around 25-30 mph, which is just about the threshold for many planes, especially smaller ones like that one. He did a great job of “crabbing” to compensate for the crosswind.

If he had tried to approach the runway straight on, the crosswind would have blown him off to the left of the centerline as he was trying to land. Chances are he would have been pushed off the runway with a high likelihood of an accident if he wasn’t able to abort the landing. He did exactly what pilots are trained to do in that situation.