Maladi was born in
Surakarta,
Central Java, on 31 August 1912. He was interested in
football from a young age, playing as a
goalkeeper. In 1930 he started with
PSIM Yogyakarta, transferring to
Persebaya Surabaya three years later and eventually becoming one of the top players in the league. He also played on the
Indonesia national football team, using several
pseudonyms. He also enjoyed
refereeing games. By the 1940s Maladi, by then a teacher and already experienced in radio broadcasting, had begun composing works in the
kroncong style. During the
national revolution Maladi fought in the
pemuda, reaching the rank of major before retiring at the end of the revolution in 1949; he was a leader of the four-day general offensive in Surakarta early in the revolution. Towards the end of the war he worked to bring information of the revolution to Indonesian nationals abroad. During this period he also worked as a broadcaster for the radio network
RRI () in Surakarta. Beginning in 1951 he served as chairman of the
Football Association of Indonesia, overseeing the organization's change in names and bringing in coach Tony Pogacnik for the national team. Under Pogacnik, the Indonesian football team played the Soviet Union to a draw at the
1956 Summer Olympics in
Melbourne. He also became involved in the
Olympics, supervising
Indonesia's first delegation at the
1952 Summer Olympics in
Helsinki, Finland, as well as the delegation at the 1956 Olympics. Maladi left the position in 1959, when he moved to
Jakarta, but remained an honorary board member. ==Government minister and death==