For someone who turned 23 in April, Tyler Toffoli already has a cabinet full of awards and accolades.

He’s won a Stanley Cup, a World Championship, the Eddie Powers Trophy, the Jim Mahon Trophy and the Red Garrett Memorial Award. While there’s something terrific to be said about being the OHL’s highest scoring right wing or the AHL’s top rookie, he claimed an award in 2015 that affects a wider pool of people than many of those worthy accomplishments.

After the season’s final game on April 11, Toffoli was named the recipient of the Jim Fox Community Service award by the Kings Care Foundation. No other player devoted as much time to community or charitable endeavors as Toffoli over the past year.

Speaking at the Kings’ El Segundo practice facility on Thursday, Toffoli noted that the club’s outreach was something that he wanted to immerse himself in even as one of the youngest players on the roster.

“I enjoy doing these things,” he said. “I think this season I talked to Jen (Senior Director of Community Relations Jennifer Pope) at the start of the year and said I wanted to step up and be able to do these things, and I enjoy them. I think she knows that she can ask me and I’ll pretty well do everything. I think it’s good to give back to the community and help out as much as I can.”

Recently, that has meant opening the Kings’ Science of Hockey exhibit at Discovery Cube LA – on a scheduled recovery day, no less – and appearing at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the Kings’ pet adoptions and presiding over the graduation of the latest class of the Lil’ Kings Learn to Play Hockey program, of which he is a presenting figure. He has also helped fundraise for Hydrocephalus Association and will soon take the ice with Kyle Clifford and Matt Greene to run the Kings Youth Hockey Camp in early August.

Earlier on Thursday, he joined Jeff Carter and Alec Martinez – both of whom have also associated themselves with community largesse – in leading the Macedonian and Barbadian Special Olympics World Summer Games delegations in a tour through the Kings’ practice facility, and his guidance, much like Carter’s and Martinez’s, came naturally.

“You just talk to them and try to get to know them for the hour, half-hour that you’re with them,” he said. “I think it’s just important for them to know that when we (Special Olympians and Kings players) meet each other, we’re both at such a high level. I was just talking to some over there – this is their Stanley Cup. I can’t imagine how excited and nervous they are. And you just try and have some fun with them for the little amount of time that you’re with them, and not so much teach them, but just get to know them.”

Tyler Toffoli speaks at the 2015 Lil' Kings graduation! A video posted by LA Kings (@lakings) on Jun 19, 2015 at 1:40pm PDT

Tyler Toffoli, on whether his parents instilled community awareness in him:

I think my parents like when I do these kinds of things because it just shows how they raised me and they raised me to be nice and to be a gentleman to whoever you’re with. It’s fun doing these little things and to give back as much as I can. And like I said, Jen knows she can ask me to do pretty well anything, and on our off days it’s kind of nice to relax, and I don’t mind getting out and helping out.

Toffoli, on the reaction he received from the Barbados delegation:

I think they were excited. I showed them the Arc Trainer there and the curved treadmill. I’m assuming they don’t have this type of technology for them to train [with]. I saw a couple of them running on the curved treadmill and it’s pretty crazy because I wouldn’t get on there myself, to be honest. It’s cool and I think they had fun seeing our gym and how incredible it is. They’re definitely excited.