Got your point on the consulting part.
Well, most schools published their employment report and while there isn't a conglomerate of the # of hires, the schools will tend to include them should the M/B/B consulting be high. With that said, Harvard places extremely well in the consulting field, though more students form HBS will go for a financial route. When you look at the # of hires, you also have to keep in mind each school's relative number of students, its location, and the # of students per that school who wish to enter consulting (this # is a harder to find). Unsurprisingly, HBS, Stanford, and Wharton will all place very well including M/B/B mainly because these firms will allot the most places for students from these three schools (this is a selective choice for obvious reasons). Kellogg is notorious in place students into M/B/B, especially McKinsey. Here's a little tipe to add to your research: it really matters little as to where you go for M/B/B/, as long as you attend one of the top 16 business schools. Why? Because as long as M/B/B recruits on campus, you will have a shot. Having said that, the higher the ranking of the school, the more potential students will go into M/B/B, and again, this is a selective thing from the firms. If you look at Tuck in your example, it places 10 into McKinsey already, not even including Bain and BCG's new hires. Tuck only has about 240 students, as oppose to Wharton's 800 students. Another thing you have to consider is the location of the school: Chicago Booth will be competing with Michigan Ross for its midwest location. Duke Fuqua and Virginia Darden will be competing more in the south (and D.C.). Columbia, NYU, Wharton will be competing for New York. Dartmouth Tuck, HBS, and Wharton will be competing for the northeast Boston-ish area. Berkeley Haas, Stanford, UCLA Anderson will be competing on the west coast. Looking at that, it makes more sense to attend a school where its location is where you want to be in post-MBA. It's not impossible for you to receive an offer from Los Angeles if you went to Michigan Ross, but it just makes your recruiting that much more difficult.
Again, these are just some points for you to ponder on. While you navigate the employment statistics, you also want to remain realitistic. If you went to Columbia, will you be able to handle the additional pressure because there will be a ton of people competing for M/B/B jobs as opposed to the Atlanta office? As hard as it is to get in Wharton, will you be able to convince the AdComs that you're a great candidate for its future class? Take it one step at a time. Everyone will pretty much tell you that it's hard enough to get in a top b-school. Try your absolutely best to get in a top business school and you will have an opportunity to go for your dream. Look at the employment numbers with some mild doubt because it doesn't show you the # of students of students in the class, nor does it talk about how many of those students actually wanted to enter consulting.