Kyle Beach appeared last week and testified about how he was sexually abused by the video coach at his then club Chicago in 2010.

Later, the Swedish expert on Viaplay and former elite goalkeeper, Erik Granqvist, also stepped forward and testified about how he was abused during a wedge in Luleå.

A situation that changed his life.

- They took the massage table and set it in the shower.

Took off all my clothes.

Then they took a skate string that dangled over their face and tied it tightly around the snout.

If I resisted, they would pull it off.

Then they took out a razor and shaved off all the hair on the whole body and head, Granqvist said in Viaplay's hockey podcast.

Later he also tells:

- When I took a shower later, I did not feel my body.

I checked myself in the mirror and I was completely empty in the eyes.

I had become a member of the team, but I lost part of myself.

A part I never found my way back to until I heard Kyle Beach.

Several people now testify to a deeply rooted culture with abuse and power games in Swedish sports, especially during weddings.

- That was about how it was, you shaved them on the head, shaved them all, even down there.

Some were very hard.

They had probably experienced the same things when they were younger and then did the same thing to others.

Some wanted to do hard stupid things and I slowed that down when I got older, says former Toronto woman, Börje Salming to Expressen.

- It is a ritual that pulls the team together so you get welded together, but of course it was hard for the juniors who came, it was very hard.

You felt really bad when they shouted that they would take one after training.

I think it has calmed down.

From what I remember, we did nothing at all in recent years.

I'm a little unsure of how it is today, if they do this, but I think it's unnecessary.

Four-time Stanley Cup champion Nicklas Lidström has not experienced this culture himself but is aware that it exists.

- It's awful.

Unfortunately, this culture has been around for a long time in hockey, says Nicklas Lidström.