Capitals Recall Clay Stevenson
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.
Capitals Recall Mitch Gibson
The Capitals recalled goaltender Mitch Gibson from AHL Hershey on Tuesday, the team announced. He is expected to dress as Logan Thompson‘s backup tonight against the Maple Leafs after Charlie Lindgren missed yesterday’s practice due to an undisclosed injury, head coach Spencer Carbery said (via Tom Gulitti of NHL.com).
Gibson started the season as Washington’s fifth-string netminder, sitting behind Thompson, Lindgren, and their initial AHL duo of Clay Stevenson and Garin Bjorklund. He wasn’t on an NHL contract, either. He was a fourth-round pick by the Caps in 2018 and has been playing pro in the organization since 2023, but he wasn’t issued a qualifying offer when his two-way deal expired last summer, making him an unrestricted free agent.
Nonetheless, he returned to Hershey on a minor-league deal and was assigned to ECHL South Carolina to start the season. The former ECAC champion with Harvard impressed with a .917 SV% and 2.32 GAA in 13 games before earning a recall to Hershey in December, as an injury to Lindgren caused an organizational domino effect. He’s essentially remained in the AHL ever since, leapfrogging Bjorklund and competing with Stevenson for positioning as Washington’s primary call-up option. In 22 outings with Hershey this season, Gibson has a .907 SV%, 2.79 GAA, and a 9-8-5 record with one shutout.
His numbers in Hershey prompted the Caps to sign him to a two-year, two-way deal in February, regaining his NHL rights and making him a call-up option. He was waived the same day and cleared. This will be the 26-year-old’s first time dressing for an NHL regular-season game; he’d previously only been rostered as a playoff emergency backup.
If Washington decides to shut Lindgren down for the final four games of the regular season, there’s a chance Gibson could make his NHL debut on either half of this weekend’s back-to-back against the Penguins. The Caps aren’t mathematically eliminated from playoff contention, trailing the Senators by five points for the second wild card spot with three other teams to leapfrog; time isn’t on their side. Their chances to make the playoffs are down to 3%, per MoneyPuck, and would only climb to 5% with a win over Toronto tonight.
Capitals Sign Mitch Gibson To Two-Way Deal
The Capitals announced they’ve signed goaltender Mitch Gibson to a two-year, two-way contract that starts this season. He’ll be placed on waivers today for the purpose of returning him to AHL Hershey, where he’s spent a good portion of the season.
It’s the third straight contract Gibson has signed with the Caps, but it’s his first multi-year deal. The 26-year-old was a fourth-round pick by Washington in 2018 but didn’t sign until five years later after he’d wrapped up a four-year collegiate run with Harvard. He spent most of the last two seasons in the No. 5 spot on Washington’s depth chart, serving as the starter in ECHL South Carolina, before being non-tendered last summer.
While the Caps no longer wanted to use an NHL contract slot on Gibson, they still wanted to keep him in the organization. He agreed to a one-year AHL contract with Hershey in June, but started the year back on assignment to South Carolina. The Capitals have been dealing with injury troubles between the pipes as of late, though, with both Charlie Lindgren and Logan Thompson missing time before the Olympic break. That’s led to Gibson getting more AHL reps lately, with 12 appearances already a new career high.
The Pennsylvania native has impressed. His .918 SV% and 2.48 GAA outpace both of Washington’s NHL-contracted mainstays in Hershey, Garin Bjorklund and Clay Stevenson. With the former struggling to the tune of a .881 mark in the same amount of workload as Gibson, it’s fair to assume he’s worked his way up to fourth-string status behind Thompson, Lindgren, and Stevenson.
With Washington’s recent injury troubles, they were likely becoming uncomfortable with the prospect of only having two call-up options available if needed – especially if Stevenson needs to go through waivers at some point down the stretch for any reason. They still have three contract slots available after inking Gibson, so they’re not in a huge crunch in that regard.
It’s worth noting Bjorklund is a pending restricted free agent. Signing Gibson through next season could indicate they aren’t planning on qualifying Bjorklund.
