Albert Polge (29 November 1909 - 22 April 1982) was a former footballer who played as a winger. Born in French Indochina, he was a France international.
Polge was born to a French father and Annamese mother. At the age of 10, his mother died, which lead him to move to France, in Gard with his paternal grandparents. He joined the School of Arts and Crafts in Aix-en-Provence. He graduated as an engineer.
Polge spent most of his football career playing for Nîmes based teams: SC Nîmes and Nîmes Olympique. In the 1931âÂÂ32 season, he scored 21 goals after 17 games for SC Nîmes. Polge mainly operated as a left-winger. The newspaper Le Sud described that âÂÂdespite his small stature, Polge, who is a great player and commands the admiration of athletesâÂÂ. Between 1934 and 1936, Polge played for AS Saint-ÃÂtienne.
Polge appeared three times with France national team between 1933 and 1934.
Polge and his wife Marcelle, née Battut (1907-1944) were accused of collaboration following the Liberation of Nîmes in 1944. While Polge avoided a death penalty, his wife was found guilty, which resulted in her execution in public. He remarried in 1950 in Avignon and divorced in 1963. An archived newspaper piece from France Football later shows that he died in April 1982.