The explanations above are simple, and correct, as those above me have said. The caveats are just that knots and little humps in a sapling stave (and a sapling stave WILL have more of them) can't just be flattened. In other words, if the sapling's original surface is almost perfectly even and smooth, even if it has little deflex or reflex in the stave overall, then you can essentially flatten it side to side until the ring lines run parallel and you are there.
But, if there are knots or bumps, esp if the crown wanders side to side, you have to account for that, and can't just run over it flat any more than you can run over a knot when chasing a ring. However, the decrowned stave would be slightly more forgiving of that. For instance, much of the elm I work with is absolutely speckled with tiny pins that never even got started to be a branch. I can just ignore them, but a big lump where the grain curved around a knot on the side of the sapling, you should still have a lump there with the ring lines going up and back down a little bit.