Right now, all Nikita is focused on is putting one tiny foot in front of the other.
"I'm happy because he started to walk," Malkin said. "I'm happy for him. I know when he's growing up, maybe 2 years old, 3 years old, he'll start to understand (who I am). I hope he will be proud of me."
These back-to-back Cup Finals have been different for Malkin compared to the back-to-back appearances he made in 2008 and '09. Back then, he was in his early 20s and single. Now, he's 30 and married with a kid who was born before Game 2 against San Jose of the '16 Final. But while things have changed off the ice, Malkin said they haven't changed much on the ice.
"(Being a father) has changed my life, for sure. But as a player, probably not," Malkin said. "I try to do the same routine every day. Be better every day. But my life changed, of course. This year, I have gone out zero times (laughs). I stay at home."
Malkin even joked that when the team has a day off on the road or they stay overnight before flying back to Pittsburgh, he tells head coach Mike Sullivan, "Let's go home!"
Malkin and his family - including his dad Vladimir and mom Natalia, who are in town right now - just can't get enough of the little guy.