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Alan King insists Saturday’s Albert Bartlett Clarence House Chase is “not the be-all and end-all” for Edwardstone as he prepares for a mouthwatering clash with Energumene at Cheltenham.
Last season's Arkle winner made a winning return to action in the Tingle Creek at Sandown, before unseating Tom Cannon early on in the Desert Orchid Chase at Kempton over Christmas.
Plans to give the second-season chaser more experience have been scuppered this term by ground which has either been too quick or frozen.
King is therefore grateful the Clarence House has been rescheduled from last weekend's abandoned fixture at Ascot.
He said: "We are very appreciative that we rescheduled and we badly need to get him out, you know?
"He has been simmering away for some time. We are happy with him, but tomorrow is not the be-all and end-all. We just need to get a run into him."
Of his Kempton mistake, King added: "He wouldn't be the first good horse to unseat, so it happens occasionally.
"Edwardstone's preparation has gone well, but we do need to get a run into him."
Queen Mother Champion Chase hero Energumene has been beaten just once in nine previous starts over fences, with that defeat coming at the hands of Shishkin in this race last season.
The Willie Mullins-trained nine-year-old was last seen sauntering to a 15-length success in the Hilly Way Chase at Cork in December – a race he also won en-route to the Clarence House last season.
Energumene's rider Paul Townend has suggested his main market rival has a few questions to answer following his Kempton faux-pas, saying in his Ladbrokes blog: "I am delighted that the Clarence House Chase was rescheduled at Cheltenham.
"It is a bigger field but Energumene is still the one you would want to ride in the race. He is the reigning champion chaser. His run at Cork in the Hilly Way Chase was a nice introduction for the season.
"He didn't do anything flashy, just did what he needed to. This will be a bigger test as he takes on Edwardstone.
"Edwardstone is exciting but comes here off the back of an unseat which isn't ideal, especially when you are taking on a horse like ours. Reports say he is jumping well, but in top-class races like this, you can't come with any excuses."
While only six runners will line up for the Grade One contest, there should be plenty of pace in the race courtesy of the Gary Moore-trained Editeur Du Gite, who was the beneficiary of Edwardstone's blunder at Kempton, landing that two-mile contest by 13 lengths.
Moore knows the nine-year-old will have to be at the top of his game to trouble the big two, however.
He said: "He has got to reproduce something like he did at Kempton to be competitive in this race.
"He is entitled to be there, so hopefully he can build on what he did last time, because he will need to.
"He likes to go forward and that will be the plan again.
"The time was fairly good at Kempton, given the ground was soft. He jumped slightly left-handed last time, so going back that way round should benefit him a bit perhaps."
Amarillo Sky has won his two starts this term for Joe Tizzard, both coming in handicaps.
He was due to be the only horse to take on Edwardstone and Energumene at Ascot and Tizzard feels that with more runners and less prize money up for grabs this weekend, it was an opportunity missed.
"Amarillo Sky was all set to run at Ascot last weekend. We would have been one of just three runners in a race worth £175,000 there, whereas this is worth £90,000 and there are six running, so it is a less attractive proposition," he said in his Coral blog.
"We could have gone to Sandown next weekend instead, but the owner is keen to run, which is fair enough, and we will find out where we stand with the big guns by running here.
"His future is probably in handicaps, but I can still see him finishing third or fourth here. We shouldn't lose anything by running, and he does run well at the track, but it's still a bit disappointing we didn't get to run at Ascot as planned, but these things happen."