Bonedoc,
I didn't know you could spell
Hope things are going well.
Another important thing to consider is that the match ALWAYS works in the favor of the applicant. Meaning the NRMP runs the applicants list first to find YOUR best match. For example, if you really loved a program, let's just use Case's program as an example, and you ranked them No. 1. And say Case hated you and ranked you at 49. If the other 48 people that Case ranked higher decide to go elsewhere, you end up at Case. Kinda sucks for Case, but you more or less lucked out.
Also, no program knows how you rank THEM. . . . .with one exception. If you tell a program that you are definitely gonna rank them No. 1 and they rank you in "matching range," and you don't match there, they know that you were FOS. And when I say matching range, I mean a program that has x number of spots available, like 6, and ranks you in the top 6. That's why people around Orthogate suggest that if you go and tell a program director you're going to rank them number one, you had better damn well mean it.
All in all, for some people it's hard to understand and there are a million students out there with the same question. Hopefully, that didn't add to the confusion.