ARCADIA, Calif. - Though champion Gamine typically does her running from in front, she was given a target to run at Saturday morning at Santa Anita in her final workout prior to the $1 million Breeder’s Cup Filly and Mare Sprint next Saturday at Del Mar. Gamine, under exercise rider Juan Ochoa, went five furlongs in 1:00.38, starting four lengths behind a workmate and finishing two in front. Gamine went in splits of 12.80, 25.41, 36.95, came up outside of her workmate at the three-sixteenths pole, switched leads and left her mate inside the eighth pole to get a final quarter of 23.43. She continued out six furlongs in 1:13.13 and seven furlongs in 1:27.59. The Filly and Mare Sprint drew only seven pre-entrants, and is expected to be drawn Monday with only six. Truth Hurts is expected to run in Sunday’s Pumpkin Pie Stakes at Belmont Park, according to trainer Chad Summers. :: BREEDERS’ CUP 2021: See DRF’s special section with top contenders, odds, comments, news, and more for each division While Gamine will be the shortest-priced favorite of the 14 Breeders’ Cup races, one of her main challengers, Bella Sofia, is a speed horse as well. Trainer Bob Baffert did not say that’s why he gave Gamine a target. “If I ask her to go, she goes,” Baffert said. “Just keeping her healthy and happy and that’s all you can ask for.” Two of Gamine’s challengers, Edgeway and Ce Ce, both put in workouts Saturday morning at Santa Anita, though Ce Ce’s came early in the morning when the track was enveloped in fog. Edgeway, trained by John Sadler, went five furlongs in 59 seconds on her own after the second break when the fog evaporated. Edgeway has won three of her last four starts, though her one loss was an 11 1/4-length defeat to Gamine in the Grade 2 Great Lady M at Los Alamitos. Edgeway has not run since wining the Grade 3 Rancho Bernardo Handicap on Aug. 20 at Del Mar. “She looked great,” Sadler said of Saturday’s work. “She’s good and fresh. She only has one bad race on her form. Every other time she’s run well." Ce Ce could not be given a time as she was one who worked during the first two training sessions when the track was enveloped in fog. The final sixteenth of the work could be seen, leading trainer Mike McCarthy to quip “that was the best six seconds of her life.” The fog also obscured seeing Baffert’s Juvenile contenders workout. However, with those horses, assistant trainer Jimmy Barnes, on a pony on the backstretch, communicated via two-way radio when the horses left the pole and the finish line was visible to get an approximate final time. At 6:30 a.m. Pinehurst went five furlongs in 58.87 seconds in company with the New York-bred stakes-placed 2-year-old Montebello. Ochoa, on Pinehurst, was pretty happy with how his horse worked. “Juan’s excited,” Baffert said. “That’s all we need to know.” Baffert’s other two Juvenile contenders, Corniche and Barossa, went together after the second break, when one could see from just inside the sixteenth pole to the wire. Barossa hung right with the Grade 1 winner Corniche and the pair went in approximately 58.31 seconds. Barossa, who is coming off a maiden win on Oct. 15 “earned his way in” to the Juvenile with that workout, Baffert said. :: Save up to 36% with a DRF Breeders' Cup Package! Includes PPs, Clocker Reports, Betting Strategies, and more. Baffert said in the mornings, “Corniche does what he has to.” Baffert’s other workers included Distaff pre-entrant As Time Goes By (five furlongs in 58.34 seconds) and Dirt Mile contender Eight Rings (59 seconds). Tripoli, Sadler’s contender for the Breeders’ Cup Classic, worked in the fog. Sadler said his exercise rider timed the move in 59 seconds on his wristwatch. Sadler said back at the barn Tripoli “looked good and scoped clean.” Dr. Schivel, working for the Breeders’ Cup Sprint, went five furlongs in 58.40 seconds, in company for trainer Mark Glatt.