
	  Wakefield Trinity v Hunslet September 1963. (9-4 win in Yorks Cup)
		  Back: Geoff Oakes, Jack Wilkinson, Bob Haigh, Eric Payne, David 
		  Sampson, Keith Holliday, Gerry Round
	  		  
Front: Gert Coetzer, Don Vines, Derek Turner, Ian Brooke, Ken Hirst, 
		  Colin Greenwood
		  
		  (Photo: courtesy of 
		  Wakefield Trinity Heritage)
	  
	  
	  David - Dave or Sammy - was a well known rugby league player and 
	  resident of Stanley who passed away on the 26th July, 
	  2021. His autobiography “Fast Lane to Shangri-La” tells that his family’s 
	  mining background produced tough, competitive people and in fact the 
	  Sampsons had  three internationals at three different sports.
	  
	  
	  Born on the 6th August 
	  1944, one of seven children, David’s chosen sport was rugby league and he 
	  joined Wakefield Trinity juniors where his brother Malcolm was already 
	  playing. David progressed to district, county and international honours 
	  whilst in the juniors, and his international cap came in May 1963 when he 
	  played for England against France as an 18 year old at the Belle Vue 
	  ground. England won this game 22-6.
	  
	  
	  He signed professional forms for Trinity in 1963 and made his first team 
	  debut replacing Neil Fox in a Yorkshire Cup game at Hunslet, where he 
	  lasted only moments before breaking his collar bone. He was out for ten 
	  weeks but returned in December when he scored his first try in the Boxing 
	  Day game against Leeds. He played twelve games that season, including 
	  three at stand off covering for an injured Harold Poynton, and scored five 
	  tries. The following season he played a total of twelve games for Trinity 
	  the following season but it was a difficult team to break into with the 
	  likes of Neil Fox, Willis Rushton and Tony Thomas in the squad. In the 
	  1965-66 season an ankle injury saw him only play twice. He was transferred 
	  to Bramley in June 1966 along with three other Trinity players. His 
	  Trinity career saw him play 28 games and score ten tries in three seasons 
	  and he earned the Wakefield Trinity Heritage number of 685.
	  
	  
	  David played at Bramley for twelve years with a total of 281 games and 
	  scoring 33 tries, including appearing in the famous BBC TV Floodlit Final 
	  win over Widnes in 1973.
	  
	  
	  In 1978 he played 28 games for Castleford, finally retiring from 
	  professional rugby league playing in 1980. He then began coaching at 
	  Castleford and coached the first team in 1987-88, reaching the Yorkshire 
	  Cup Final. From 1989-1992 he coached Doncaster, then five months for 
	  Nottingham City, finally retiring in late 1992. 
	  
	  In his life in Stanley, David was the well-known publican first of the 
	  Ship Inn, the Travellers and then Sampsons for many years. He played and  coached at 
	  Stanley Rangers ARLFC well into his forties. He began his writing career 
	  in 2012 with “Fast Lane to Shangri-La”, part of a trilogy of rugby league 
	  autobiographies - “My Shangri-La” with his son Dean Sampson and “A darker 
	  side to Shangri-La” and other books.   A family man, David was the father 
	  of the rugby league footballer Dean 
	  Sampson, Jonathan and Rebecca and the younger brother of the rugby league 
	  footballer Malcolm 
	  Sampson, and uncle of the sprinter Denise Ramsden and rugby union and rugby league footballer Paul 
	  Sampson.
	  
	  With grateful thanks to Wakefield Trinity Heritage for supplying the 
	  information and photo for this article