The Washington Capitals announced that they have recalled goaltender Clay Stevenson from their AHL affiliate, the Hershey Bears. In a corresponding move, netminder Mitchell Gibson has been reassigned to the Bears.
These two transactions have likely been made with Hershey’s best interests in mind. The Capitals need to have a goalie from the Bears on their NHL roster because incumbent backup Charlie Lindgren is sidelined with an upper-body injury. Stevenson, 27, started Hershey’s game yesterday against the Charlotte Checkers, saving 21 of 22 shots in a 2-1 victory.
Hershey plays this afternoon against the Charlotte Checkers. Reassigning Gibson puts him in a position to potentially start that game. With just four games remaining on their schedule, today’s contest is very important to the Bears as they look to clinch their spot in the playoffs.
By swapping Gibson for Stevenson on the Capitals’ NHL roster, the team has switched who will back up Logan Thompson for today’s game against the Pittsburgh Penguins. It’ll now be Stevenson. Since he played last night, the Capitals are now carrying some added risk: in the event Thompson is unavailable due to injury or other circumstances, they could be forced to play a goalie in Stevenson who played just last night, and has had to travel on short notice. That would hardly be ideal for a team that needs to avoid a regulation loss to keep their slim playoff hopes alive.
But in exchange for taking on the additional risk that comes with running Stevenson as the backup today, the Capitals have significantly upgraded the goalie available to Hershey for its important matchup today against Charlotte. Gibson, 26, has thoroughly outplayed Hershey’s No. 3 goalie, 23-year-old Garin Bjorklund, this season. Gibson has a .907 save percentage in 22 games compared to Bjorklund’s .876 save percentage in 17 games.
Put simply: this transaction may allow the Bears to start Gibson against the Checkers instead of Bjorklund, which could notably increase the team’s odds of winning an important late-season game.
There is some risk at the NHL level attached to this transaction, as was previously mentioned. But the Capitals have long proven to be an organization that is deeply invested in the success of their AHL affiliate, and today’s transaction further underscores that fact.

The Caps actually have some decent depth behind Bjorklund. While Jesper Vikman, acquired from Vegas, has his contract run out at the end of the year, Washington has three fringe prospects in Americans Nicholas Kempf and Chase Clark, along with Frenchman Antoine Keller. Keller went 0-3 on a disadvantaged French Olympic team, but played decently. Clark has played for four collegiate teams in four years, with the last three in Atlantic Hockey (Sacred Heart, AIC, Canisius) and went 11-10-2 with Canisius this past season. Kempf OS probably the least likely of the trio to make the NHL, with only 11 wins in 47GP for the University of Notre Dame.