The Penguins clinched a berth in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for a 12th straight season, the longest active streak in the NHL, with a 5-2 win against the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday before losing 3-1 to the Washington Capitals the following night. The Capitals have clinched first place in the division and the Penguins are in second place, two points ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets and Philadelphia Flyers entering play Tuesday.
Malkin was visibly frustrated near the end of the loss to the Capitals, getting into an altercation with Capitals forwards T.J. Oshie and Evgeny Kuzentsov. But his confidence wasn't shaken.
"I will always believe in my team. I will always believe in this group," Malkin said. "I see these guys every day and we're still hungry."
Pittsburgh will look to solidify home-ice advantage in the Eastern Conference First Round when it plays Columbus at Nationwide Arena on Thursday (7 p.m. ET: FS-O, ATTSN-PT, NHL.TV) in a game that could be for second place in the division.
"We need to win," Malkin said. "Start [the playoffs] at home, and it doesn't matter against who. Doesn't matter what game. We need to win."
If it sounds as if Malkin believes the Penguins are in dire straits, it shouldn't. He's kept Pittsburgh's struggles in perspective, even though the Penguins have gone 6-4-2 since March 10.
"I think we're fine. It's not perfect every season," Malkin said. "Every time, we work hard. It's the third season [coming off two championships]. It's a long season. Last two years, we played so many games. We still fight. We're not winning a lot this year, but we still win.