Deep learning has yielded extraordinary results in vision and natural language processing, but this achievement comes at a cost. Most deep learning models require enormous resources during training, both in terms of computation and in human labeling effort. In this paper, we show that one can achieve similar accuracy to traditional deep-learning models, while using less training data. Much of the previous work in this area relies on using uncertainty or some form of diversity to select subsets of a larger training set. Submodularity, a discrete analogue of convexity, has been exploited to model diversity in various settings including data subset selection. In contrast to prior methods, we propose a novel diversity driven objective function, and balancing constraints on class labels and decision boundaries using matroids. This allows us to use efficient greedy algorithms with approximation guarantees for subset selection. We outperform baselines on standard image classification datasets such as CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and ImageNet. In addition, we also show that the proposed balancing constraints can play a key role in boosting the performance in long-tailed datasets such as CIFAR-100-LT.