With the roof closed because of the wet weather in Paris, Sabalenka initially settled quicker in the heavier conditions that suit her game.
The boy, who racially abused Mr Kohli before slapping him in the face with a slider shoe, was sentenced to seven years in custody at Leicester Crown Court on Thursday.The girl, who encouraged the assault and laughed as she filmed it on her phone, was given a youth rehabilitation order of three years and made subject to a six-month curfew. Both were convicted of manslaughter.
During the hearing, prosecutor Harpreet Sandu KC said Mr Kohli was subjected to a "seven-and-a-half minute period of continuing aggression" while taking his dog Rocky for a walk.The attack left Mr Kohli with three broken ribs and other fractures, but Mr Sandhu KC said the fatal injury was to his spinal cord, caused by a spine fracture.Mr Kohli's children found him at the park "screaming out" in pain after the attack.
Mr Kohli's daughter, Susan Kohli, told the court he was a "devoted life partner" to his wife Satinder for 55 years.Taking to the witness box to read her victim impact statement out to the court, she said: "We feel nothing but anger and disgust towards the boy and the girl.
"The girl disgustingly videoed dad as he lay on his side after the attack.
"Dad passed away before our eyes surrounded by his family who all had tears in their eyes.""There were people who claimed that their forefathers had taught Mayankutty in his childhood. Others claimed that their forefathers had provided timber for the guest house," a senior Keyi family member, who wanted to stay anonymous, told the BBC.
Scams followed. State officials say in 2017 fraudsters posing as Keyi descendants duped locals into handing over money, promising a share of the compensation.Today, the case remains unresolved.
Some descendants propose the best way to end the dispute would be to ask the Saudi government to use the compensation money to build another guest house for Hajj pilgrims, as Myankutti Keyi had intended.But others reject this, arguing that the guest house was privately owned, and so any compensation rightfully belongs to the family.