Championship pedigree prepares TCOM student for medical school
- September 10, 2025
- By: Steven Bartolotta
- Community
It was practicing two times a day, six days a week plus balancing a full-time load of pre-med classes that showed Savannah Foster’s commitment to being part of the powerhouse rowing team at The University of Texas at Austin
That commitment as a Division I athlete also prepared Foster to become a medical student in The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine.
“It’s a culmination of everything I have worked for my whole life, knowing that I have wanted to do this forever,” Foster said. “It’s very exciting. I’ve put in a lot of work to get into medical school. I can do it again and just keep getting better at it.”
Foster has always had two constants in her life, sports and medicine. Her dad, Shane Foster, ran track and spent a year as a walk-on wide receiver in 1990 at UT, and her mom, Mirelle, is a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician in Kerrville. It’s no surprise that Foster grew up playing basketball and was a four-year letterman in high school tennis and track and field.
What surprised her after high school was continuing her athletic career. Foster had settled into her freshman year at UT when she saw a social media post about walk-on tryouts for the rowing team.
“I didn’t even know it was a sport,” Foster said. “I missed the competitive nature of sports, so I tried out, made the team and the rest was history.”
It was quite a history. In spring 2021, during her freshman year, UT won the national championship. The university followed that up with another national title in 2022 and then again in 2024.
Foster was hungry to compete, so after gaining 10 pounds of muscle during the summer after her freshman year, she was thrown into the competition in fall 2021.
“I wanted to contribute physically, but it’s an uphill battle and very competitive,” said Foster. “But my sophomore year, they threw us into everything.”
Foster and her teammates competed in sweeping, which consists of four rowers and a coxswain. Rowers in sweeping only have a single oar. Sculling is the other category for rowing, and rowers use an oar on both sides of the boat. There are also divisions where a boat can contain eight rowers plus the coxswain.
Her most productive year was in 2023 when she helped Texas to the Big 12 championship and what would eventually become another national title. Foster suffered a stress fracture in her rib her senior year, which kept her out of competition, but the injury did confirm something in her mind.
“It confirmed that I wanted to do osteopathic medicine,” she said.
When Foster wasn’t playing sports in her youth, she was with her mom in the clinic or shadowing her as she made rounds with her patients. It was where she knew she wanted to be.
“I want to be the one who’s taking care of someone and getting them back to being healthy and independent,” Foster said. “Every life lesson through sports carried me into medicine — earning how to balance your time, not comparing yourself to your teammates at practice and working under pressure.”
As she looked at medical schools, she admittedly didn’t know the difference between osteopathic and allopathic medicine. Her mother was an M.D., but the more research she did, the more she thought osteopathic medicine aligned better with her approach to medicine.
“The more I learned about holistic care, the mind and body, the more I thought about my experiences at Texas and how much I would have benefited from this a lot,” Foster said. “I want to be a D.O. and learn the manipulation techniques so that I can treat my patients with a more hands-on approach and fewer prescriptions. Learning from an osteopathic perspective, I will have better knowledge of what is going on, allowing me to relieve muscular tension instead of prescribing medications and not fixing the root problem.”
Foster won’t be the only doctor in her family, but her mother is already very supportive and excited about the opportunities she also will be able to learn.
“She was really excited that I was going to be learning more techniques that she wants me to teach her about,” Foster said.
Being fiercely competitive herself, Foster is keenly aware of how competitive medical school students are and is careful not to put too much pressure on herself. She plans to keep active as much as possible, going back to her track and field roots.
“I’m very proud that I was able to get things done and come to medical school,” said Foster. “I put in a whole lot of work, and coming into medical school, I knew that it would be a challenge to juggle classes, exams and learning a lot of new information. But I feel prepared, and I am excited to keep building my skills so that I can be successful.”
It's In Our DNA
At UNT Health Fort Worth, our students are destined to shape the future of health care, research and public health, and our faculty and staff are here to guide them every step of the way. Whether it’s teaching safe patient care, advancing groundbreaking research or improving community health, it’s all second nature. We were born to live out our mission to create solutions for a healthier community. Why? Because it’s in our DNA.
Other Stories





Social media