Background
Malley, whose grandfather was an Irish immigrant, was born in Arizona and attended Santa Clara University, where he played college football.
Malley, whose grandfather was an Irish immigrant, was born in Arizona and attended Santa Clara University, where he played college football.
Malley earned a Bachelor of Philosophy and a Bachelor of Laws.
He served as the head coach of the San Francisco Dons at the University of San Francisco from 1936 to 1940. Before that, he had success as a high school football coach at Saint Ignatius High School from 1929 to 1935. He served as the team captain in the early 1920s.
He then coached football at Saint Ignatius High School beginning in 1929.
He also served on the faculty at the school and taught civics and sociology. Saint Ignatius went undefeated from September 1937 until December 1939, when they were finally beaten by Loyola High School of Los Angeles, 12–7, in the California state Catholic prep school championship.
The success of Malley"s teams prompted the school to promote the program back to the American Automobile Association level In 1934, the San Francisco Chronicle compared his 1935 team to Notre Dame under Knute Rockne:
"Today in San Francisco is an unsung, unnoted football team that embodies about everything that Notre Dame teams of years ago stood for—rambling, fight and Irish—and undefeated records.
That team belongs to Saint Ignatius High School.
The Ignatians ramble over California a bit, next year they may even trek to Reno. Irish names dominate the lineup and the record is clean—not even one point is tabbed for opponents."
Malley could not extend his interscholastic success to the college level, however. At the University of San Francisco, he amassed an 18–20–8 record during his tenure from 1936 to 1940.
In 1939, a San Francisco newspaper article before the game against Loyola had a headline quote that referred to Malley"s worries over the hot weather conditions his team would face in Los Los Angeles
A San Jose Evening News writer sardonically noted that, with Malley"s extensive bad luck on the football field, "the heat may be on from several sources!" Malley resigned as San Francisco head coach in February 1941. Malley was named among the "Legends of USF Athletics" in 2005.