Elemer Hirsch came from a wealthy Jewish family who owned large portions of land in Beclean.[2][6] He studied law school in Budapest and Vienna, starting to work as a lawyer at age 24.[2] He started playing football at CA Cluj.[3] Several years later he moved to Universitatea Cluj, where he also played ice hockey.[3][5][6][7][8][9][10] Hirsch also competed in figure skating competitions, managing to win three Romanian national titles in 1924, 1925 and 1927, also becoming an international figure skating judge.[2][3][5][6] After he retired from playing football, he became a football referee, including arbitrating in a Romanian top-division Divizia A match.[3][11] In the 1940s following the Second Vienna Award, due to his Jewish origin, the Hungarian authorities prohibited him from working as a lawyer and deprived him of his property which was later nationalized by the Romanian communist regime.[2][4][12] He managed to escape from Cluj when the authorities wanted to send him to a Holocaustextermination camp.[2][4][6] After the end of World War II he returned to Cluj and started his coaching career at CFR.[3][6][13] Between 1947 and 1948 he was the federal captain of Romania's national team.[3] In 1950 he became coach at Armata Cluj.[2] In May 1953 after the end of a match in Baia Mare he collapsed on his way to the team bus, the goalkeeperNicolae Szoboszlay tried to give him first aid but Hirsch died in his arms.[2][6]