If you think its likely you've pelleted out the mitochondria, along with other things at high speed, I suppose you could re-suspend in some sort of homogenizing solution, and try centrifuging again, using differential speeds a second time. There's no reason not to try and salvage your experiment.
I remember my first such experiment, I was all set with a special centrifugation solution -- 0.25 M sucrose, NaCl, EDTA, Tris buffer at pH blah-blah. I brought it to my adviser, a real old timer, and he asked, "You got the quarter molar sucrose ready?" I explained what I'd made, and he was like, "fine, fine, as long as its cold and we work quickly." Took me a couplea times doing this to learn this, yes the protocol is important, very likely the performance is improved by the chleator scavenging heavy metal ions, the salt keeping the environment natural, pH control is important. But the real deciding factor in the art and science of molecular biology is cold, confidence, and speed.