Rory McIlroy won his second straight Masters on Sunday — just the fourth player ever to repeat as champion — although some of the discourse following his sixth major title has focused on if it was fair to the rest of the field that McIlroy admitted he spent so much time practicing at Augusta National before the tournament.

It was even brought up on ESPN’s First Take — a show that usually doesn’t spend much (or any) time on golf — and was a topic in certain corners of social media.

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But do those critics have a legitimate gripe? According to the veteran pros who have chimed in, the verdict is a unanimous no.

“I thought it was the dumbest argument I’ve ever seen in my life,” Kevin Kisner said on Barstool‘s ForePlay podcast.

After he built a six-shot lead through 36 holes, McIlroy said he’d spent a good amount of time playing Augusta National over the last couple of weeks and that familiarity helped his putting. He said he played the course two weeks ago and was there Monday and Tuesday the week before the tournament. He also arrived on Sunday before Masters week to play with his dad, Gerry, which comes as a perk of winning the tournament.

“I’ve been on this golf course so much the last three weeks, and that’s been a combination of practice and chipping and putting around greens, and then just playing one ball and shooting scores and ending up in weird places that you maybe never find yourself and just trying to figure it out,” McIlroy said Friday. “I think just spending so much time up here has been a big part of it.”

McIlroy withdrew from the Arnold Palmer Invitational with an injury and tied for 46th a week later at the Players, but he took the next three weeks off, skipping the Valspar in Tampa and the two Texas events.

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“I honestly just don’t like the three tournaments leading up to this event,” McIlroy said Friday. “I’d rather come up here. I did a couple of days where I dropped [my daughter] Poppy to school, flew up here, played, landed back home and had dinner with her, or had dinner with [my wife] Erica. Like I did a couple of day trips like that where I felt it was a better use of my time than going to Houston or San Antonio. It wasn’t really about conserving energy, but just I felt the more time I could spend up here, the better.”

After his win, some of these comments were scrutinized. Was he allowed to practice more than others? Was it fair?

While Augusta National is tight-lipped about club policy, a couple of pros have come to McIlroy’s defense and shed some light on the process of playing there pre-tournament.

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