There may or may not be any truth at all in what What Hifi claimed, depending on context. When reviewers talked about amp output into a 2 ohm load, they generally refer to short term duration, most likely in ms, or may be up to a few seconds. Some speakers may have dips to 2 ohm or even less but it would be for a very narrow range, i.e. a very sharp and narrow dip, so most well designed amps can handle.
If What hifi mentioned a 2-ohm capable amp, they probably just meant the amp could deal with those sharp dips without shutting down, most likely not meant to be a so called "continuous" rating.
Case in point, even some (very few for sure) AVRs could pass a 1 ohm test. The Denon AVR-3805 was one of those, and I owned one. That one passed the following tests:
Note: Duration for the 2 and 1 ohm test were not specified, they might have talked about that elsewhere on their website but I am not sure and also not sure if they are still in business.
2 ohm, 1 kHz:
299.9W @0.9% (Front Channel)
311.6W @0.9% (Front Channel)
1 ohm, 1 kHz:
160.3 @0.8% (Front Channel)
169.6W @1% (Surround Channel)
If you are interested to see the full test results:
Report (milleraudioresearch.com)