Debate day: Trump's ready for Rubio, Cruz to bring it on


              Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney walks across stage at Libby Gardner Hall to make a speech about the state of the 2016 presidential race and Donald Trump at the University of Utah Thursday, March 3, 2016, in Salt Lake City. The 2012 GOP presidential nominee has been critical of front-runner Donald Trump on Twitter in recent weeks and has yet to endorse any of the candidates. (Al Hartmann/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP) DESERET NEWS OUT; LOCAL TELEVISION OUT; MAGS OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT
Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney walks across stage at Libby Gardner Hall to make a speech about the state of the 2016 presidential race and Donald Trump at the University of Utah Thursday, March 3, 2016, in Salt Lake City. The 2012 GOP presidential nominee has been critical of front-runner Donald Trump on Twitter in recent weeks and has yet to endorse any of the candidates. (Al Hartmann/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP) DESERET NEWS OUT; LOCAL TELEVISION OUT; MAGS OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT

DETROIT (AP) - Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio head into the 11th debate of the Republican presidential race Thursday in an ever-more urgent scramble to take down Donald Trump - with an ever-more nervous GOP establishment wishing them luck.

Trump pronounced himself ready for his rivals to bring it on, batting away any suggestion of standing above the fray.

"I can't act overly presidential because I'm going to have people attacking from every side," he said on NBC's "Today" show. "A very good man, Ben Carson's not there any more, so now we're going to have more time for the fighting."

With Carson's exit from the race this week, the field of Republican candidates has now been narrowed to four, including Ohio Gov. John Kasich.

But any number of predictions that GOP voters would coalesce around one anti-Trump as the field narrowed have come and gone without a change in the overall dynamic.

Trump, with 10 state victories, continues to dominate the conversation and the delegate count.

That has GOP establishment figures gnashing their teeth over the prospect that it may soon be too late to stop Trump's insurgent candidacy, and reviving talk of a brokered convention and an irreparably damaged Republican Party.

Mitt Romney, the party's 2012 nominee, on Thursday made a rare public appearance to denounce Trump as "a phony" who is "playing the American public for suckers."

That's the same line of attack Rubio is pushing as he tries to emerge as Trump's chief rival. Rubio dramatically shifted his tone in the last debate and unleashed a torrent of criticism on Trump.

His sparring with Trump deteriorated into a weeklong series of tit-for-tat insults and taunts on everything from bed-wetting to bad tans.

But for all of that, Rubio still came out of Super Tuesday's 11-state round of voting with just one victory, in the Minnesota caucuses.

In advance of Thursday's debate, Rubio signaled his intent to continue his efforts to unmask Trump as a "con artist" who hasn't laid out serious policy proposals.

Turning the nomination over to Trump would mean the "end of the Republican Party," Rubio claimed.

A rejuvenated Cruz, with three Super Tuesday victories to showcase, is insisting that the "the campaign is now down to a two person race - me vs. Donald Trump,"

Cruz is urging his GOP rivals to "prayerfully consider" dropping out of the race to give him a clear shot at the front-runner. Carson may be gone, but Cruz' suggestion to drop out seems to be going nowhere with Rubio and Kasich.

Rubio dismissed Cruz' Super Tuesday trifecta as inconsequential and pinned his own hopes on a March 15 victory in his home state of Florida, which awards all 99 of its delegates to the winner.

Kasich, meanwhile, said it's important to "stop Mr. Trump" and argued that he's the candidate best positioned to do that, by winning his home state of Ohio on March 15.

Speaking to reporters in Detroit in advance of the debate, Kasich said that if he wins Ohio, the Republican primary will likely end with a contested convention in Cleveland.

Thursday's debate, sponsored by Fox News, is the first time Trump will face his rivals since scooping up seven victories on Super Tuesday.

It's also the first time he'll face questioning from Fox News' Megyn Kelly since the two clashed in the first primary debate. That's when Kelly's tough questioning about Trump's treatment of women blew up into a running argument between Fox and the candidate. Trump, who dismissed Kelly as a "lightweight" and a "bimbo," ended up boycotting a subsequent Fox debate, claiming the network was unfair.

Trump has continued to pile up delegates during the long, and so far unsuccessful, effort to topple him.

He leads the field with 319 delegates. Cruz has 226, Rubio 110 and Kasich 25. It takes 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination for president.

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Benac reported from Washington.

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Follow Nancy Benac on Twitter at http://twitter.com/nbenac

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