Since 1960, just 10 of 279 non-Kentucky Derby starters have won the Preakness Stakes. That’s a 3.6 percent win rate, a 0.36 impact value (IV) and a 0.64 odds-based impact value (OBIV).
Dr. William Quirin popularized the concept of an impact value in “Winning at the Races: Computer Discoveries in Thoroughbred Handicapping,” which he calculated by “dividing the percentage of winners with a given characteristic by the percentage of starters with that characteristic.”
“An IV of 1.00 means that horses with a specific characteristic have won no more and no less than their fair share of races,” Dr. Quirin explained.
Similarly, an IV of greater than 1.00 denotes that a particular factor is producing more than its fair share of winners, while an IV under 1.00 means that it is producing less.