Australian Open 2025: Henry Patten on Harri Heliovaara & Wimbledon

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Patten, 28, is a late bloomer who studied finance at university in the United States.

In 2016, he spent the summer break from his studies working on the outdoor courts at Wimbledon as a data analyst for IBM.

Heliovarra, 35, stopped playing professionally in 2013 because of an autoimmune disease that affects his spine.

“I never really aspired to be a professional tennis player as a junior or when I was at university. I just kept doing quite well and it snowballed,” Patten said.

“And Harri thought that was it for him when he stopped playing singles. He was working at the airport, had a stint in finance then came back to the sport.

“Now we’re both very focused on tennis but we’re multi-faceted in our backgrounds.”

Patten says it feels like he has known Heliovaara for years, even though they only started spending time together from April.

Their friendship was further strengthened when Patten headed to Helsinki for a week of training in October, staying with Heliovaara, his wife and two small children in their family home.

After the serious business of training, Patten was keen to learn and experience as much about the Finnish way of life as he could.

Regular trips around the capital city to see the tourist sights were followed by some home cooking by Heliovaara – including his speciality dish of reindeer stew.

“He told me about halfway through that he was cooking it, so I was a little nervous about the outcome,” laughs Patten.

“It was very good. I was very complimentary and he was very complimentary about his own cooking.

“I don’t know what that says about him but he seemed to think he had done a very good job.”

That sense of humour, alongside a deep mutual respect, underpins a stable partnership that they hope will give them a head start against a host of new men’s pairings that have come together for this season.

The targets for the new season naturally start with another Grand Slam title in Melbourne, before a concerted effort for the world’s top 10 aided by greater consistency on the ATP Tour.

“Everyone else is scrambling a little bit and not knowing how these partnerships are going to go,” Patten said.

“Ours is a partnership which we know works and can be very effective.

“We’re looking forward to kicking on. We have a lot to achieve.”

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