Maybe perpetualpriapism just came off a long call or is a little miffed about the new ACGME rules about being soft on interns and such. I must admit the "strategic napping" in the rules almost goes well with a blanket and cookies and maybe a little teddy bear too.
I must also admit I'm a fan of the 80 hour work week for the most part, and it has often protected me over the last three years. Most people, especially those who had already finished residency or almost finished, were not fans of the 80 hour work week when it came out either. I guess time will tell wether it's a good idea or not. I'm sure in a few years those of us who didn't have the blanket and cookies for interns will tell sob stories about how we worked so hard and are such better surgeons than you all because we did 30 hour calls, just like the pre-80 hour work week folks tell those of us in residency now. In the end it will probably make no difference in your training, but we'll see.
Anyway, I do think the point perpetualpriapism made is important wether you agree with the tone or not. Most of you will hopefully sail through the match and get one of your top programs. That's great. Some of you, however, will not match at all, and every year there are several who are super applicants with amazing board scores, plenty of meaningful research and strong letters who don't match. The point is, you should look at every program as a place that could make you an orthopaedic surgeon and be very grateful if you get an interview. It may feel at times that you as the applicant have the upperhand as you are getting that 18th interview invitation having had several programs blow sunshine at you about how wonderful they think you are, but you still might not match (truth in the number and situation, not hypothetical).
I'm not at UM Columbia, but I'd be very careful before discounting them, especially if you get an interview invite. Programs don't fill spots when they don't rank enough residents or incorrectly submit their list (as happens now and then in California). However, if you compare the number of open spots to the number of unmatched applicants each year it becomes obvious who really has the upperhand. You'd be very lucky to match at any program no matter what your stats or even program directors tell you. I think the point is it's good to remember that.