LJ-USAF-22, It depends on number of districts per state and how many appointees those districts have in the Academy at the time, each can have 5 appointees at each Academy at a given time. So you can somewhat do the math. All states have 2 senators, . Michigan has 14 congressional districts. So, usually, MOCs have at least 1 appointment/year, so Michigan would have at least 16 appointments, minimum. This number can go up if there are more slots, if some are given other nom category appointments (Presidential, etc), and for those that were selected from the national pool. I know of many districts that only had one appointment "charged" to their slate of 10 nominations, (each MOC can nominate 10 for each appointment slot he has available) but then had several from that slate actually receive appointments. This is because if you took ALL the available slots for all state's MOC's and all the appointments for special category Noms, it still doesn't equal the number needed to fill a class. The rest of fully qualified candidates with a Nom are placed in the National pool and compete nationally for the remaining slots to round out the class.
So to further answer your question as to where that leaves you: you will originally only compete against those other 9 on your congressional reps slate. If you do not win the slate, and are fully qualified, you will compete in the national pool for any remaining appointments.