Match lists are not a good tool for evaluating schools--i.e., finding the right school for you. I recommend that you not look at match lists until you've essentially completed the admissions process and have been accepted to one or more schools. Match lists are not good indicators of the quality of a school, and they conceal more than they reveal. The fundamental problem is that you don't know the preferences and credentials of the people who matched; further, you're completely oblivious to other extenuating factors that might have affected the rank lists of med school graduates (e.g., family). Let me give you an example: your family lives in Atlanta, GA, and your wife just got a good job at company X in Atlanta. You attended Emory medical school and you would like to go into cardiology. You graduated at the top of your class and aced the national boards--without a doubt, you could go anywhere in the country for residency in internal medicine, including the heavy hitters in the Northeast (Hopkins, Harvard, UPenn, etc.) But as it turns out, Emory has a solid internal medicine department--reputable but not in the same class as the programs in the NE--and the cardiology fellowship at Emory is ranked among the very best in the country. What would you do? Would you rank Hopkins or UPenn ahead of Emory because of the difference in national reputation and all the privileges that attend this reputation, or would you rank Emory ahead of these programs, because of other factors (your family, your wife, your career goal)? I'm willing to bet that you would opt for the latter.
This is the problem with match lists: you don't know all the details surrounding the match.