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Swansea boss Garry Monk praises Liverpool's Joe Allen before clash

Wales international Joe Allen returns to his former club Swansea on Monday night with Garry Monk believing his old teammate has matured into the "fantastic player" Liverpool fans expected following his 2012 transfer.

Allen has had to be patient to win over the Liverpool faithful since making a £15 million move to Merseyside and being branded the "Welsh Xavi" by Reds boss Brendan Rodgers, who made the same journey from south Wales.

But the 25-year-old has thrived in skipper Steven Gerrard's absence in the last few weeks, being one of Liverpool's stand-out players as Rodgers' side have recorded three successive  Premier League victories to close the gap on fourth-placed Manchester United and boost their Champions League qualification chances.

Gerrard is back in contention for the trip to the Liberty Stadium after missing the last seven games in league and cup with a hamstring injury but Swansea manager Monk says he is delighted to see Allen develop into the sort of player he believed he would be.

"He is starting to be recognised and he deserves it," Monk said. "It is tough going from Swansea to Liverpool, it is not an easy transition. He can be defensive and offensive, he is a two-way player.

"Maybe he struggled to do that early on there but it has clicked and he has been fantastic and bossed games for them recently.

"I have seen his progression here through to the first team. He always looked like he would be a top player and he is proving it.

"He is maturing, he is a man not a boy, has filled out and he is coming into his peak.

"He has been at Liverpool for a while and he understands the expectation and is taking that on to the field.

"You come to a point in your career where you grow up and mature, your knowledge of the game and being at a big club clicks into place and in this run he has been key for them."

Allen returns to Swansea just a few days after it was revealed that the Welsh club have had the second most profitable academy in the Premier League since 2012.

Numbers released by the International Centre for Sports Studies' Football Observatory showed that only Southampton have produced the most expensive group of players who have been sold on to other clubs.

Swansea eclipsed the likes of Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain to rank 11th on the European table and Allen's transfer fee was responsible for almost half of the club's £31.8 million raised from academy sales.

"Joe and Ben [Davies, who joined Tottenham last summer] were two Welsh boys who came through the system here and as a club we are looking to improve that system further in terms of recruitment to get more players like them," Monk said.

"That is important for a club like Swansea and those players can be an inspiration for the next generation coming through.

"It is a great credit to Swansea that they were developed here and they have gone on in their careers to play for big clubs."

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