He played in various European championships in frontline positions in mid-1920, appeared in the Hungarian Újpest FC, Ferencvárosi TC, in Belgium,[1] and FK Austria Wien.
In 1936 he arrived in the Soviet Union, and spent some time working with the city teams Zaporizhia and Dnipropetrovsk including Stal Dnipropetrovsk,[3] then the order of the All-Union Committee for Physical Culture and Sports of the USSR it was sent to Tbilisi. Limbeck stayed there until March 1937[4] and worked as chief coach of Dinamo Tbilisi, which reached the finals of the USSR, then he organized a children's football school.
This biographical article related to association football in France, about a forward born in the 1900s, is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.