Man card? Shees. That's might be the reason why I'm not that macho, right? I don't know what would have done: cowardice is full of subtleties. If I were Magnussen, I would have stepped on the brakes, if Bergmeister, I would have lost that race.
Besides, I'm not supporting you, flyn. I'm supporting (kind of) Bergmeister. For example, you said that the bump justified the move. I dare to disagree: no previous bump justifies an illegal move. Maybe it's wiser to take every hit "independently" from others you might have, even in the same lap, and even from the same moron, not because you have to, but because if people learns that you can become enraged by a bump, then you're toasted (at least, when racing with my friends who are an indecent, unpresentable, dreadful and untidy lot of colombians).
Ray, you might be right, but the book says something else, I think. Anyway, go on, I won't interfere.
The move was dangerous, but I think that Magnussen should have moved towards the right, that's what you're taugth to do: one move toward one side and then full throttle towards the other. Then you cannot be blocked within the rules.
I repeat you might be right as far as "normal decency" is involved, Bergmeister should know he was going to slam Magnussen into the wall, but, looking at that from Magnussen's race director point of view, perhaps you can tell your driver to be smarter than putting himself into the wall that is "closed": Bergmeister trajectory was clear from the start of the move. Actually, my first though, before the accident happened, was: why's he (that is, Magnussen) trying to overtake on the left?
I've defended my position many times in my life, and as far as I move towards one side, I think that my adversary knows what I'm doing and moves accordingly.