McLeod Bethel-Thompson is usually the last Vikings player to leave the field after practice. As players and coaches stream into the locker room, Bethel-Thompson stays behind to throw passes to anyone willing to catch them. He's also one of the first players to arrive at Winter Park every morning and among the last to leave.
"He's one of those guys you would refer to as a gym rat," offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave said.
Bethel-Thompson, the No. 3 quarterback, has a simple explanation: "I've got to get better."
Bethel-Thompson should get ample work in the Vikings' final preseason game Thursday night against Tennessee. Christian Ponder won't play and Matt Cassel might get limited snaps, giving coaches an opportunity to evaluate Bethel-Thompson extensively.
The fourth preseason game offers bubble players one last chance to impress before final cuts, which come Friday and Saturday. Bethel-Thompson wants to prove he deserves a spot on the 53-man roster.
As Vikings fans fret over Ponder's long-term viability and debate whether Cassel is an upgrade, Bethel-Thompson toils as an intriguing project with a cannon arm whose future in the NFL remains an open-ended question.
Inactive for all 16 regular-season games in 2012, Bethel-Thompson served as Joe Webb's backup in the playoff game against Green Bay with Ponder sidelined because of an arm injury. There's speculation that Webb's bid to make the team as a wide receiver this season could impact Bethel-Thompson's fate. In theory, the Vikings don't need a third quarterback if they keep Webb, because he could play quarterback in a pinch.
Vikings coaches, however, seem encouraged by Bethel-Thompson's progress. The young quarterback said he feels "light years ahead" of his rookie season, but … "I don't think I'm even close to what I can be," he said.