Michael Bloomberg has been getting a lot of air time--in more ways than one.
The former mayor is in the midst of a travel blitz through Super Tuesday states. These fourteen states are likely make-or-break for Bloomberg, who will appear on the ballot for the first time in just a few days.
This weekend, he was set to make his seventh trip to Virginia, and his fourth trip to North Carolina.
He would make his seventh trip to delegate-rich Texas on Sunday. He went to Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma. He was also heading to Alabama.
"We are getting data back all the time. Mike is a data -driven guy. Our schedule is based on where we can do the most good," said Bloomberg's Senior Advisor Howard Wolfson.
So on the night of Super Tuesday, the former mayor will be in Florida, which does not vote until the middle of March.
It's unclear what that means about how confident the campaign is about its prospects.
"It's important to always be looking forward, to be looking ahead to what's next and that's why Florida makes so much sense for us," said Sabrina Singh, national spokesperson for the Bloomberg campaign.
The former mayor has said he will stick it out until it's clear he can't win. While he has been spending quite a bit of time in less delegate-rich southern states, the Bloomberg campaign claims he is still making a play for the night's big ticket items -- California and Texas.
"You have to look at the whole map and we know that California the state that has over 400 delegates at stake. We are also focused on that state. It's a wide range we have to focus on," Singh said.
Recent polling has put Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders up in California by double digits.