Background
A 6"3" (190 m) point guard, Maloney was born in Silver Spring, Maryland, but grew up in Haddonfield, New Jersey.
A 6"3" (190 m) point guard, Maloney was born in Silver Spring, Maryland, but grew up in Haddonfield, New Jersey.
Haddonfield Memorial High School.
Early years
National Collegiate Athletic Association
Maloney began his basketball career at Vanderbilt University, transferring after his freshman year to the University of Pennsylvania, and played three seasons as a Quaker. During Maloney"s three seasons as a Penn Quaker, the team went 42-0 in the Ivy League with Maloney as a starting guard, including three Ivy League championships and subsequently 3 bids to the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament. Maloney holds several Quaker records, including a 37-point game (sophomore year vs American.
Tied for fourth-best single game scoring performance in program history), 91 three-pointers made in single season (second all-time, "92-"93), 44.4% three-pointer field goal percentage (fifth all-time, "92-"93), 89.7% free throw percentage (61 of 68, first all time, "93-"94), and 62 steals in a single season (fourth all time, "93-"94).
In the Philadelphia Big 5, Maloney was a two-time first-team All-Big 5 selection ("92-"93 and "94-"95). Maloney was second-team All-Big 5 selection in "93-94.
Professional career
Never drafted by an National Basketball Association team, he spent time in the College of Business Administration before finding playing time with three different clubs in the former competition over the course of six seasons. Maloney played with the Houston Rockets from 1996 to 1999, the Chicago Bulls during 1999–2000 and the Atlanta Hawks for the 2000-2001 and 2002-2003 seasons.
He is notable for his rookie season when the two players in front of him on the depth chart had season ending injuries and Matt was able to start all 82 regular season games at point guard for a Rockets squad with future Hall of Famers Charles Barkley, Clyde Drexler, and Hakeem Olajuwon.
Maloney"s father, Jim, who was a longtime assistant coach for John Chaney at Temple University, died only months before Matt began playing for his first National Basketball Association team