The "Antelope Drawing Statistics Report" is good for comparison on what the total quotas are and how many applied. I would be surprised to not see a big increase in applicants that will only continue for years to come. However, the report does not really tell the full story because it does not reflect BONUS points.
For example, say Montana district "ABC" has a quota of 2000 Antelope tags. Nonresident quota is 10%, or 200 tags. Say 1000 NR applied for that area, with 700 first choice. You would see about 200 tags issued to first choice and none for second or third. It tells one nothing about how many "total" names were in the "drawing hat". One might conclude "I had 200/1000 chances to draw that tag", which is far from true because of BONUS points.
Think of the draw like a big ole cowboy hat where names are thrown in and drawn out of. Let's use a simple example where 1 tag is available and 3 hunters apply. You might assume that you have 1/3 chances of drawing, which is not true:
Hunter A has no bonus points so 1 point for current application = 1 chance in the hat.
Hunter B has 3 bonus points, so 3 "squared" = 9 + 1 point for current application = 10 chances in the hat.
Hunter C has 5 bonus points, so 5 "squared" = 25 + 1 point for current application = 26 chances in the hat.
So, there are NOT 3 names in the drawing hat, there are 37.
Hunter A has 1/37 chance of drawing (3%)
Hunter B has 10/37 chance of drawing (27%)
Hunter C has 26/37 chance of drawing (70%)
In a bigger hypothetical draw, assuming the average applicant has 2 bonus points, the number of "names in the hat" per hunter is 2 squared (4) + 1 for current application = 5. Assuming 1000 applicants, all with the average of 5 points, that means 5000 names in the hat vying for 200 tags. In a real world draw, some may have a lot of bonus points and some none and their chances reflect that. Regardless, in this type of random draw, if you have "your name in the hat" at least once you have a chance of drawing.
This also shows that there is no such thing as "guaranteed" tags when talking about Montana BONUS points, but there are circumstances where tags are all but "guaranteed" when talking about Montana PREFERENCE points.