I don’t get your complaint. If you are ok hunting 26, you should have put it as a 3rd choice and you’d be going hunting there this fall. The fact that you aren’t is nobody’s fault but your own.I'm in the same boat as you (as are at least 41% of the other resident applicants), with my 12-yr old looking forward to his first antelope hunt that will now have to wait -- we'll get to still try for deer and elk, but antelope is really the perfect first hunt. The reality is that applicants have increased while tags have decreased. In 2010 the total quota for resident buck tags was 33,753 and the number of applicants was 26,012. This year, the quota of resident buck tags was 22,640 and the number of applicants was 38,113. So, in a perfectly distributed tag scenario, only 59% of residents are getting buck tags today.
But it's actually worse than that. Let's look at Area 26 to see why. There were 1034 Type 1 tags available in the resident draw. Resident applications for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd choice were 212, 126, and 73, respectively. So even if all choices were given the tag, there should still be 500+ buck tags available in the leftover. But you'll see that there are NO leftovers because the remainder was rolled over into the non-resident pool (NR-Random = 139, NR-Special Random = 81, NR-PP = 419, NR-Special PP = 243). So nonresidents were given 882 of the available 1100 buck tags for that area. If instead, the R/NR split was held to until AFTER the leftover draw, at least you and I would have a chance to hunt bucks in our home state this year.
In addition, I think given the antelope population decline along with the increase in applicants, it well past time to stop allowing two doe/fawn applications in the initial drawing (maybe even in the the leftover drawing).