Leonid Toropchenko


Leonid Aleksandrovich Toropchenko, is a retired Russian professional ice hockey player.

Playing career

Toropchenko played several years of professional hockey in Russia before signing with the Hartford Whalers on September 11, 1992. Because of an NHL rule where professional overseas players had to be drafted in order to play in the National Hockey League, Toropchenko did not make the final Whalers' roster and was assigned to their AHL affiliate in Springfield on 24 September 1992. After putting up a career-best 61 points in 71 regular season games, he was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the tenth round of the 1993 NHL Entry Draft, going 260th overall. After being drafted, Toropchenko was assigned to the Penguins' IHL affiliate in Cleveland. After attending Penguins' training camp in 1993 and 1994 and being demoted to Muskegon of the Colonial Hockey League, Toropchenko did not report. Instead, Toropchenko signed a one-year contract with Torpedo Yaroslavl of the Russian Superleague. He remained with the team for one season, scoring two points in sixteen games.
Toropchenko signed with Metallurg Magnitogorsk for the 1995-96 season and improved in goals, assists, and points from his previous season in Yaroslavl. He did not play during the 1996-97 RSL season, but returned to hockey by joining the Kristall Saratov during the 1997-98 season, where his points totals once again decreased.
Torpochenko finished his career in the Vysshaya Hokkeinaya Liga, splitting his time between four different teams from 1998 until his retirement in 2002.

Personal

Toropchenko has the unfortunate distinction of being Massachusetts' first ever "Deadbeat Of The Month", a program started in February 1998 by Acting Governor Paul Cellucci and Revenue Commissioner Mitchell Adams. His daughter's mother met Toropchenko while he was a member of the Springfield Indians in 1992 and had not heard from Toropchenko since September 1994. At the time of the citation, Toropchenko was said to have owed four years of unpaid support totaling $35,400. While the program had a 90% success rate in its first year, Toropchenko's case remained unsolved a year later as there were no new leads in the case and Toropchenko having left the United States in 1994.