Jagr, who consistently has praised Penguins co-owner and former teammate Mario Lemieux, won the Stanley Cup with Pittsburgh in 1991 and 1992.
"We had such a fantastic team," Jagr said. "It was fun to play, fun to learn from Mario or other great players we had on the team. I said in an interview, they were asking me about the [two Cup titles]. The team we had, we only won two. I said if Mario had not have gotten back problems, it would have been three, four more. That team was just too good."
Jagr's session with the media began with a question regarding Crosby, who could return from his third concussion in six years on Tuesday. Jagr was asked where Crosby ranks among those he has played against.
"It's tough to say," Jagr said. "When [Crosby] came in the League, when he was 18, I think he scored 100 points (102 in 2005-06)," Jagr said. "Not many guys can do that in their first year. I think Mario did it or [Wayne] Gretzky, but not many guys. So, you know he's a special, special guy. Last year, early in the season, it looks like he's going to have a bad season and after they changed the coach, I think it helped him a lot and you could see it during the World Cup [of Hockey 2016].
"He was totally dominating and his line was unstoppable. So, it's too bad it happened to him, the concussion. At the World Cup, he was just dominating."
Jagr feels these Penguins and their fans relate to players like Crosby and Malkin, and that he has partially been forgotten. While that's likely not true, Jagr discussed it with a smile.
"The last time I played for Pittsburgh was 2000, so it's 16 years," he said. "That's a long time ago. Those fans that were coming to the arena when I was playing for Pittsburgh, they're not coming anymore. They're probably dead or not interested anymore. They probably have new fans. It's a different team, so I would say the fans, probably half of the fans right now, they don't even know I played here."