With rumors of their divide, former Indian cricketer Virender Sehwag and his wife Aarti have unfollowed one another on Instagram.
To put it briefly,
- Aarti Ahlawat and Viender Sehwag were married in 2004 and have two children together, Vedant and Aryavir.
- Sehwag hasn’t included his wife in any of his recent social media posts.
Sehwag divorce news, in the face of ongoing virender sehwag divorce rumors, former Indian cricketer Virender Sehwag and his wife, Aarti, have apparently unfollowed one another on Instagram. According to many sources on Thursday, January 23, the pair, who have been living apart for several months, is on the verge of divorcing after 20 years of marriage. Hindustan Times claims that the pair has even ceased to follow one another on Instagram.
Aryavir and Vedant are the couple’s two sons. Sehwag and Aarti were married in 2004. The former India opener’s wife has been absent from his social media photos over the last several months, which fans have noted, adding to the rumors that they are no longer together. Although the couple has not yet released any formal statements, people are speculating that Sehwag’s personal life is not going well.
Aryavir and Vedant are the couple’s two sons. Sehwag and Aarti were married in 2004. The former India opener’s wife has been absent from his social media photos over the last several months, which fans have noted, adding to the rumors that they are no longer together. Although the couple has not yet released any formal statements, people are guessing that Sehwag’s personal life is not going well.
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With his outstanding performances in the game’s longest format, Sehwag is regarded as India’s second-best opener in Test cricket. The batsman, who was born in Delhi, has amassed 8586 runs at an average of 49.34 from 104 games (180 innings), with 32 fifties and 23 hundreds.
Sehwag’s remarkable on-field career
Sehwag’s Extraordinary Journey on the Field
In 2004 against Pakistan in Multan, he became the first Indian batsman to reach a triple hundred in the format, solidifying his place in history. He has an incredible strike rate of 82.23. He joined a select group of players with two triple hundreds in Test cricket in 2008 after scoring another triple ton in Chennai against South Africa.
He has scored 8273 runs in ODIs from 251 games (245 innings) with a strike rate of 104.33 and an average of 35.05, including 15 hundreds and 38 fifties. With his first-ball boundaries, Sehwag ignited the 2011 ODI World Cup, contributing to India’s victory. In addition, he contributed to India’s 2007 T20 World Cup success and has 394 runs in T20Is, including two half-centuries. In October 2015, Sehwag declared his retirement following a prosperous career.