This always confuses me from a physics perspective. Upon touchdown, what is the effect of the wind on a large airplane/airliner (Boeing 737 and above)? Below are three cases I put together to make it easier to explain my confusion:
No decrab, the wind acts on the tall fin yawing to plane further into the wind at touchdown, and the pilot counters this by pushing the rudder downwind (video).
The pilot decrabs, the same effect upon touchdown, but here the correction is rudder upwind initially (video).
What I normally read: the wind pushes the aircraft, and the correction is rudder upwind. This AOPA article for instance, shows a drawing with the wind force pushing a [small-er] plane downwind.
Apologies if I butchered the crosswind landings.