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Joy Drop: England's Euro championship a win all around

Hello, friends! I hope you are all enjoying the summer warmth and getting some rest and fun. To start, I will share that I was on hiatus last week because I was fully engulfed in happiness. I got married. It was a beautiful, small religious ceremony and it was brimming with my favourite thing: joy. 

Hi. I got married today. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Alhamdulillah?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Alhamdulillah</a> <a href="https://t.co/Tk5kYoAyay">pic.twitter.com/Tk5kYoAyay</a>

I have returned from our honeymoon in Jamaica and I must say, the unplugging was rejuvenating and wondrous.

The Commonwealth Games are in full force in Birmingham, England and CBC Sports is there. One of the gold medals won by Canadians was by Sarah Mitton in shot put. Shot put has been part of the Olympics since 1896 but the women's competition only began in 1948. It's a sport that requires strength, poise and immense focus. I love watching women throw things. And this event at the Commonwealth Games was no exception. 

Mitton, from Brooklyn, N.S., came fourth at last month's World Athletic Championships so the top of the podium was a superb finish. I particularly like the ending of the video in which she warmly congratulates silver medallist Danniel Thomas-Dodd (Jamaica) and then bronze winner Maddison-Lee Wesche (New Zealand).

While I was away, the women's Euros finished with an amazing feat: highest attendance for any Euros final — men's or women's — in history. On Sunday, 87,192 people watched the Lionesses claim their first European title at Wembley Stadium in London. While there are changes that are needed to elevate and racially diversify the national women's program, it is important that the world knows that watching women's

Read more on cbc.ca