Donald Trump will barnstorm through seven southern states in just four days after Thursday night's Republican primary debate in Houston, Texas setting the stage for what could be an election blowout on 'Super Tuesday,' March 1.

On Friday he will stump at the Fort Worth Convention Center in Fort Worth, Texas before boarding his private Boeing 757 en route to a second convention center rally in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Saturday will see The Donald in Bentonville, Arkansas, the home of Wal-Mart, rallying supporters at the airport there. Then it's off to Millington, Tennessee, a suburb of Memphis, for another airport hangar speech.

Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, Alabama, Virginia and Georgia – and that's just in three days! Donald Trump will saturate the American south with his stump speeches leading up to Super Tuesday, March 1

ALWAYS BE CLOSING: Trump was trying to seal a deal with Virginia Republicans on Wednesday at Regent University in Virginia Beach, where college founder and evangelist Pat Robertson (right) hosted him onstage

Shades of things to come: Wild crowds greeted Trump like a conquering hero when he claimed victory Tuesday night in Nevada

On Sunday Trump will be in Huntsville, Alabama inside an aviation engineering company's hangar – again at a regional airport.

He'll next turn up at Radford University in Radford, Viginia and Valdosta State University in Valdosta, Georgia – both on Monday.

Trump also spoke Wednesday at Regent University, a Christian college, in Virginia Beach, Virginia, talking onstage with evangelist Pat Robertson and Christian Broadcasting Network host David Brody.

His rapid-fire schedule is so tightly orchestrated that only Trump's private jet can make all the stops. There is no commercial airline service, for instance, that can take journalists in between Monday's two university stops quickly enough to make it to George in time for Secret Service screening.

And unlike the two presidential candidates on the Democratic side of the 2016 White House contest, Team Trump isn't helping news outlets with chartered flights.

'We are not providing a charter,' Trump press secretary Hope Hicks confirmed on Wednesday.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, Trump's main competition for the GOP's presidential nomination, haven't published schedules that are nearly ambitious as his.

Trump has the leading poll position in nearly every state set to hold elections on Tuesday – the exceptions being Texas and Arkansas, where Cruz holds slim leads.

Rubio will be in Oklahoma City and Dallas on Friday, and in Kennesaw, Georgia on Saturday at lunchtime, according to his published schedule.

A few hours later he's scheduled to be in Birmingham, Alabama for a presidential forum hosted by Yellowhammer News.

Rubio also has stops scheduled in Arkansas and Virginia, and he will visit more places than The Donald – but in smaller venues than the ones Trump is accustomed to packing.

Cruz is also committed to be at the Yellowhammer event, according to organizers.

But he hasn't released the rest of his pre-Super Tuesday schedule yet.

Cruz is thought to be embracing an all-in Texas strategy, campaigning in few other places in advance of Tuesday. Losing his home state to Trump would be a devastating and possible campaign-ending embarrassment.

Cruz's wife Heidi is scheduled to make 10 separate Texas stops on her own between Friday and Sunday.

In addition to the seven states Trump will visit in the run-up to Super Tuesday, there will be Republican contests on that day in Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming.

Trump is leading the race with 81 delegates to the Republican National Convention following victories in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada.

Cruz and Rubio each have just 17.

LOCKING IT UP? Trump and his omnipresent sons Don Jr. (left) and Eric (right) expect to do well Tuesday but the Republican presidential front-runner isn't coasting or resting on his laurels

On Tuesday there will be a whopping 595 delegates at stake for Republicans. That's 24 per cent of the 2,472 distributed throughout the country.

It will take 1,237 to secure the nomination in July when the party meets in Cleveland, Ohio.

But the stakes will get even higher on March 15 when Republican contests can be 'winner-take-all,' meaning that even a slim plurality win for a candidate will net him all the delegates at stake.

Elections and caucuses so far this year, including those scheduled for Tuesday, award delegates proportionately, usually with a minimum requirement for getting any delegates at all.

Texas has its own unusual rule befitting the gun-happy Lone star State: a 50 per cent 'trigger.' If any candidate wins an outright majority of votes there on Tuesday, Texas will become winner-take-all.

Trump said Tuesday night after his caucus victory in Nevada that 'we've had some great numbers coming out of Texas, and amazing numbers coming out of Tennessee and Georgia and Arkansas and then in a couple of weeks later Florida.'

'We love Florida so. We're going to do very well in Ohio. We're beating the governor. It's always nice to be beating the governor. And Michigan – the whole thing. It's going to be an amazing two months.'