Victoria Zangara was one of the stars within the group of girls who played hockey at the Club Atlético y Progreso de Brandsen in 2004. She had a promising career ahead of her and trained a lot to achieve her goal: to be a professional hockey player. But, as she reported in 2016, between 2004 and 2006 - when she was between 14 and 16 years old - she was repeatedly sexually abused by the team's technical director, Pablo Fernández Garaygorta, a situation that ended up restricting her career. In one of the areas where she most liked to be is where she suffered the abuse. This contradiction is what weighs on so many similar cases against women and diversities, scenes where the male abuser builds a bond of trust and a strong imprint of credibility with the victims and their families, to achieve his goal, as explained in dialogue with Télam. Zangara's lawyer, Sofía Caravelos. At that time Garaygorta was coach of Club Atlético y Progreso Brandsen and physical trainer of “Las Leoncitas”, the U21 women's hockey team. He was in contact with minors, not only in the field of hockey but also at school: he was a teacher of “Life in Nature” and Physical Education in Victoria and other students in the educational field.