Background
The son of Russian immigrants, Belko was born in Gary, Indiana and graduated from Froebel High School.
The son of Russian immigrants, Belko was born in Gary, Indiana and graduated from Froebel High School.
He attended Compton Junior College in southern California for a year, with plans to play basketball at University of Southern California, where his older brother Max (1914-1944) starred in football. Belko graduated from the school with a Bachelor of Surgery in 1939.
He was later the third commissioner of the Big Sky Conference. A two-sport athlete for the Vandals, he was a guard and small forward in basketball and a halfback and quarterback on the football team, and a teammate of future coaches Lyle Smith and Tony Knap. Belko opted not to play baseball, though he considered it his best sport.
Following his graduation from Idaho in 1939, Belko was a high school coach in northern Idaho at Saint Maries for a season and for three at Lewiston, then served in the United States. Navy in World World War II as a Russian interpreter.
Following his military service, Belko briefly returned to Lewiston, then moved to the University of Idaho in Moscow and coached the Vandal freshman teams in football and basketball. Idaho State
In 1950, Belko was hired as the head basketball coach at Idaho State College in Pocatello.
His Bengals soon dominated the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference and made the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament in four consecutive seasons (1953-1956). The National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament field varied from 22 to 25 teams in the mid-1950s.
Belko"s six-season record at Idaho State was 109–51 (681), and he was named the conference coach of the year three times.
The Bengals" conference record in his last four seasons was 39–3 (929). Oregon
Belko was the head coach of the Ducks for fifteen seasons and posted a 179–211 (459) record, with a 44–102 (301) record in conference play. His teams made the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament twice, in 1960 and 1961, as an independent.
The 1960 team advanced to the Western regional finals, the national quarterfinals (Elite 8).
After five years as an independent, Oregon joined the Pacific-8 Conference (then "AAWU") for the 1964-1965 season. Following a pair of 17–9 seasons, Belko stepped down in April 1971 at age 55 and remained in Eugene as the assistant athletic director at Oregon.
Career coaching record
After a year as assistant athletic director, Belko left the Oregon athletic department in 1972 to direct the Far West Classic basketball tournament in Portland for three years. In 1975, he moved to Boise to work for the Big Sky Conference as an evaluator of basketball officials.
Belko was named commissioner of the conference in December 1976 and served from 1977 to 1981.
When the assistant basketball coach at University of Southern California that recruited him got the head job at Idaho, also a member of the Pacific Coast Conference, Belko followed Forrest Twogood north in 1936 and hitchhiked over a thousand miles (1600 km) to Moscow. He was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and was senior class president This success led to his hiring in June 1956 at Oregon, then a member of the Pacific Coast Conference.