Baltimore Sun

Boston twins ride their own paths to Division I

18-year-old McDonogh equestrian­s to compete at different schools

- By Katherine Fominykh

Grace Boston trotted into the ring on an athletic bay horse named Swiss Air.

“There’s only one person who can beat Sarah Boston, and that’s her sister, Grace Boston!” the announcer called, to their mother Sharon’s memory.

From a slower start, Grace urged her mount to pick up speed over the crowd of imposing jumps, and rode to a 0.22-second finish behind her sister in the qualifying round of the 2016 USHJA Zones 3 and 4 Children’s Individual Championsh­ip in Culpeper, Va.

It was a situation Sharon had found her daughters in before.

“When they’re riding in the same ring, one will be champion, one will be reserve champion,” she said. “In the car ride home, one will be a little reserved, and the other one will have to temper their excitement.”

The Boston sisters are now on a different kind of ride. Both 18-year-old McDonogh equestrian­s, after a decade of competing in tournament­s across the country, earned Division I scholarshi­ps to continue riding at the college level in the fall.

There are only16 schools with Division I equestrian programs; Baylor, Sarah’s future school, and Texas A&M, Grace’s, are two. After fielding offers from several programs, the twins each made a firm

commitment by December.

While one twin will be wearing Bear green and the other Aggie maroon, they’re indistingu­ishable by their ribbon count.

“I think it’s actually pretty dead even,” Grace said. “No one has ever had a peak where they went much farther.”

Grace became Zone 3 Tad Coffin Equitation champion in 2017 and Maclay Region 3 champion in 2016, and has two top-25 finishes at the USEF Medal Finals. She was the Grand Small Junior Hunter champion at the Devon Horse Show, the oldest outdoor multi-breed equestrian competitio­n in America, this past spring — having never ridden her mount until two days before competitio­n.

Meanwhile, back in 2015, Sarah was the Gary Baker Grand Hunter champion for Maryland in 2014, the 2016 High Children’s Jumper champion at the Washington Internatio­nal Horse Show and the Equitation Medal Final champion for the Virginia Horse Show Associatio­n, with a broken foot to boot, and more.

Both earned top ribbons at the US Pony Finals in 2012 and 2013, with Sarah winning a third in 2011.

This fall will be the first time the twins, despite having competed mostly at different events recently, will be truly apart.

“It was definitely in the back of our minds that we do not want to go to the same school. We kind of want to part ways a little bit because we can’t stay together forever,” Grace said.

The two debuted their riding careers in first grade, as part of a mandatory two-week physical education requiremen­t at McDonogh, and quickly fell head over boots.

Their careers progressed quickly because they didn’t own their own ponies and tried many different school mounts, according to their trainer and McDonogh director of riding Streett Moore, a trend they’ve mostly continued through present day.

“By the time they got to the national level, they’d already had tools in the toolbox,” Moore said.

But from the start, their approaches diverged.

“Sarah was brave, did whatever she could, wanted to jump huge. I was more timid about it. To be safe, wanted to go slow,” said Grace, who once as a child cried at the prospect of riding her horse.

Sarah eventually became primarily a show jumper, tackling tall jumps at high speed. Grace had the personalit­y best suited for the hunter and equitation classes, which prioritize­s form and elegance.

“I was very much a perfection­ist, so I wanted to do the class I was doing exactly perfect until I could move up,” she said. “Which is very unrealisti­c for a 7-year-old girl to get perfect. My trainers would say, ‘You’re ready,’ but I wanted to jump small.”

Grace learned to canter after her sister once, like a nervous player finding the right coach, her trainers, Moore and Amy Dawson, brought her a skinny gray pony named Almost Magic.

“She, to this day, gave me the most confidence. All of a sudden, I wantedtoju­mp her, I wanted to canter her,” Grace said.

The Bostons traveled constantly throughout their pre-college careers, flying Wednesday and Thursday nights for the weekend competitio­ns in Florida, North Carolina, southeaste­rn New York and more.

If this all sounds like too much to fit into the summers between school years, that’s because it is.

“It gets really overwhelmi­ng,” Sarah said. “We’d have a week off every once in a while, but it was hard. But you just gotta work through it because once the school year is done, it gets a lot easier.”

Teachers sent down schoolwork for the sisters while their friends FaceTimed in to help them with their assignment­s.

The Bostons join approximat­ely a dozen equestrian­s from their home state riding for Division I programs. Texas A&M alone already has three Marylander Aggies: Brianna Sims, who attended Archbishop Spalding, and Ellie Williams and Lauren Rachuba, both from Woodbine.

“Definitely being 90 miles away from each other is reassuring to us,” Grace said, “that it’s not hard to get to each other if we need each other.”

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Sarah Boston, left, poses with her horse, Diva, while twin sister Grace Boston holds the reins for Stellar at the McDonogh School Equestrian Center. The Bostons join approximat­ely a dozen equestrian­s from Maryland riding for Division I programs.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN Sarah Boston, left, poses with her horse, Diva, while twin sister Grace Boston holds the reins for Stellar at the McDonogh School Equestrian Center. The Bostons join approximat­ely a dozen equestrian­s from Maryland riding for Division I programs.

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