There’s a second-level filly-and-mare dirt-route allowance featured Sunday at Fair Grounds. It goes as the first of 10 races on the card and attracted a field of just six. All well and good, but probably the most arresting thing one notices on the Fair Grounds program Sunday is a horse named Givemeaminit. Records on the subject aren’t kept, but it’s doubtful any horse ever has brought a higher level of accomplishment into a Louisiana-bred maiden race than Givemeaminit does in the second race Sunday. Six starts into his career, Givemeaminit has earned close to $200,000. He was third, beaten less than one length, in the Grade 1 Hopeful Stakes last summer at Saratoga and ran respectably in the Grade 1 Breeders’ Futurity and the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, where he was fourth, before failing to fire his best shot and finishing eighth in the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes on Nov. 25. Givemeaminit did get class relief in his most recent start, a $101,000 division of the Louisiana Futurity on Dec. 31, but he also lost again, running a winning race but finishing second by a neck. And so, for the first time since he finished second to subsequent Hopeful winner Sporting Chance in a Saratoga maiden race, Givemeaminit runs against other horses who never have won a race. None of them, it goes without saying, has strung together anything like Givemeaminit’s form, and he will no doubt be bet accordingly. Sutherland injured in fall Jockey Chantal Sutherland is expected to miss eight to 12 weeks after being injured in a one-horse spill on Thursday’s card. Sutherland, according to her agent, Rick Mocklin, has a broken left clavicle and a fracture at the bottom of her right knee. Both injuries will be repaired during a single surgical procedure, but as of Friday morning, no date had been set, Mocklin said. Sutherland was riding a first-time starter named McFeely in a 5 1/2-furlong turf-sprint maiden race when she was dismounted midway around the far turn at about the three-furlong pole. “What apparently happened was the horse, as it started to accelerate, was overreaching,” Mocklin said. “He reached out with a hind leg and grabbed a quarter on his front leg and just pulled himself down. It was a freak accident.” Sutherland, 41, has been based in Southern California much of her career and moved her tack for the first time to Fair Grounds this winter. Her business had recently picked up, and she has had 15 winners at the meeting.