Yes your right I was thinking of Athena. I love her story too. She didn't care for men very much if I am correct but she was one tough goddess.
Actually Athena cared very much about men, just not sexually. In mythic and historic context she is very much a man's goddess, more so than any other goddess. Some scholars attribute this metaphorically to her birth from Zeus alone, a man, and not by Zeus and Hera or Zeus and another woman.
As a warrior, she is the protector of many of the famous heroes, including Perseus, Achilles and Ulysses, and easily defeats Ares in combat in the Iliad. While she helps and rewards men, she most often punishes women who challenge her skill or authority, including Arachne and Medusa. Her roles as warrior and wisdom far overshadowed her influence as goddess of weaving and household crafts, because she was reverently worshipped by the state politicians and the military, which were exclusively male.
About the only story where she does not punish a woman is the death of her friend Pallas from whom she takes her title Pallas Athena. But more often than other goddesses, Athena does not favour women.
In worship, unlike Hestia, Artemis, or Aphrodite, she had no group of priestesses or train of female devotees.