If your fair is late in the year, and you want to raise one of your own to show and not plan on winning just learning, he will be fine. He will not be as pretty or as deep sided, that's the Limousin in him. He will produce a lean high yielding carcass.
He will be tighter gutted than the crossbred steers, he does not have a desirable top line, he appears to break at the shoulder and could be considered tight hearted and a little finer boned than your typical show steer. Now if most the calves are locally bred with out club calf influence he will work, time and growing may change some of the weakness he currently displays. He is not a bad calf, put on feed he should grow and produce a good carcass, his being purebred does not help him, he displays the muscle of the Limousin but with that comes the tighter gut a little coarser looking.
I he is not a bad calf just not a show type calf, We started with that type commercial Angus, made money off of them and then bought show type calves, nothing wrong with starting small and working your way up.