The Internet Invitational was had multiple rules controversies in the series finale, with Paige Spiranac and Malosi Togisala being in the center of them. While Spiranac was accused of improving a lie in the weeds, Togisala was accused of using the ‘slope’ on his rangefinder illegally, which he has now partially admitted to.For the unversed, the female golf influencer reacted to the controversy surrounding her with a tearful message about the abuse she had received online. However, Togisala, who had not spoken about his incident until Monday, has admitted that the slope function on his device was on but only for the first hole of the tournament. He claimed receiving a text message advising players to keep the slope function switched off.Togisala, who stated receiving the message while walking off the opening green, jokingly claimed that he will “die on the hill” defending himself in the controversy. He reiterated “the slope was off” for the rest of the tournament despite being accused of messing with his rangefinder before handing it over for inspection.The Good Good Golf personality said on the brand’s podcast:“I did have the slope on on the first hole of the Internet Invitational because we were the first tee time. I did… for the first hole, but then Fat Perez, he asked Dave, ‘hey, are we going to do slope?’ And then we got a text. Me, B, Mac Boucher, and Joey Colfus. So, at the end of the day, you know, I told people this. I’ll die on the hill. Like the slope was off. Slope was off.”It is pertinent to note that Togisala has now defended himself twice while being interrogated about having the slope on during the $1 million-event. He’d earlier made a “hand of a God” claim while explaining his position on during the finale of the golf influencer-run Internet Invitational.Paige Spiranac controversy at the Internet InvitationalThe Internet Invitational finale’s viral scandals overshadowed the winning team’s performance. Paige Spiranac and Malosi Togisala’s alleged illegal moves in the team-play format competition took the spotlight as deceased Cody ‘Beef’ Franke and US Amateur champion Brad Dalke won the $1 million prize from Barstool owner and founder Dave Portnoy for the event.Interestingly, Spiranac’s moment of rules controversy at the event gained more traction as she was seen breaking down after being accused of cheating. The golf influencer turned model claimed she “wasn’t trying to cheat” while fighting back tears. The moment on the million-viewer event went viral. She followed it up, after the event, with a tearful testimonial on her Instagram Stories in early November.The 32-year-old took to her social media to callout the hate she received online during the course of the event. She made the comments ahead of the show’s last episode debuted on Barstool's YouTube channel on Nov. 13.Paige Spiranac said on Instagram Stories, which has since expired:“There’s more important things than wanting to be liked. But I do want to be liked. And I want to fit in, and I've tried for a lot of my life to find places where I can fit in.”Other interesting incidents at the Internet Invitational included Luke Kwon oversleeping his tee time on the tournament’s opening day. While Spiranac and Togisala had to give explanations for their alleged actions, fellow YouTubers George Bryan and Luke Tooms later revealed that Kwon situation was dramatized for entertainment.