Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Friends remember longtime sports handicappe­r

David Malinsky’s body found at Mount Charleston

- By Mike Shoro Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter.

A longtime Las Vegas sports handicappe­r and writer was found dead Friday at Mount Charleston after a weeklong search.

The body of David Malinsky, 57, was discovered Friday afternoon near Mummy Spring, those who knew him confirmed.

Metropolit­an Police Department’s search and rescue team, Red Rock Search and Rescue and many volunteers spent hours searching for Malinsky since he went missing April 14.

A close friend, Ted Sevransky of Las Vegas, said Malinsky slipped and fell to his death.

Malinsky was a fixture in the sports betting scene in Las Vegas and was known for his insight into betting.

“He was exemplary in everything that he did,” Sevransky, also a longtime handicappe­r, said, adding that Malinsky was a mentor to many.

Malinsky was born Dec. 30, 1960, in Waynesburg, Pennsylvan­ia, but grew up in Garards Fort, Pennsylvan­ia, both small towns in the southwest corner of the state, Sevransky said.

Malinsky moved to Las Vegas in 1984 to pursue a career in sports betting.

He had a sports betting blog and took part in radio shows, perhaps most famously the “Stardust Line” show at the old Stardust sports book.

Malinsky had the ability to connect to the average bettor with his knack for breaking down complex games into more digestible parts, Sevransky said.

He loved the challenge of betting and finding any edge he could find over the betting marketplac­e, Sevransky said. While others in the sports betting world would ride the highs and lows that came with the job, he was able to manage his bankroll and emotions through the good times and the bad, Sevransky said.

“He liked the jousting between the bettor and the bookie,” Sevransky said.

Bob Scucci, director of race and sports at Boyd Gaming. met Malinsky about 25 years ago at Stardust and the two became close friends.

While they met through sports, they preferred to talk politics, culture, food, wine, Scotch whisky and cigars, Scucci said.

“He often told me that his job allowed him to pursue his true passions,” Scucci said.

Malinsky spent free time hiking in the mountains where he studied bristlecon­e pine trees, Sevransky said.

Malinsky would photograph and document the trees, which his family said he often called his “old friends in high places.” He was fascinated with the bristlecon­e’s longevity and the remote places the trees lived.

“Each tree told a different story,” said Scucci, adding that Malinsky would connect the tree’s story to the story of the human condition.

Las Vegan David Levy, who met Malinsky while working on a documentar­y on preserving Mount Charleston, remembered Malinsky often would talk about the bristlecon­e pines and spoke in a spiritual way about the land. He would send photograph­s he took in the mountains in an email chain to other nature buffs, often with a poem or verse he wrote connecting nature and life.

One such photograph, one of the last he sent, was of a lone tree overlookin­g a vast Nevada landscape. Levy said the photo reminds him of Malinsky, a man who was often at peace by himself among the trees.

Funeral arrangemen­ts are pending.

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David Malinsky

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