Sampere grew up in NASCAR country, but he had never attended a race before this summer. His auto-mechanic experience amounted to installing lift kits on his friends’ trucks for fun. His father, Jeff, occasionally put NASCAR on TV, but it mostly served as white noise until he told Davis about the time he went to a race in college and described it as a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
“Who would have ever thought that I would be in the industry?” said Sampere, who starred in lacrosse at Leesville Road High School in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Soon after his tryout, Sampere signed his contract at Stewart-Haas Racing’s headquarters in nearby Kannapolis. He hasn’t stopped smiling since.
“He’s always happy, and he’s not afraid to work,” said Jacob Budd, Sampere’s teammate and third-year jackman for Stewart-Haas Racing. “You’ll meet some people who are hardheaded — too good to do this or that. Davis, he’s not afraid to jump right into it, even cleaning wheels after practice that have glue on them from gluing lug nuts. He’s a good worker. That’s a big thing in this sport, too.”
Sampere’s reputation preceded him. As an intern at Richard Childress Racing, where former High Point basketball player and current Joe Gibbs Racing pit crew member Derrell Edwards made his bones as a tire carrier and jackman, Sampere took it upon himself to stock the refrigerator before he left at night after noticing the drivers were drinking warm water in the morning. At High Point, he embraced the arrival of assistant coach Ken Broschart after a disappointing freshman season, improving from 37 percent in 2017 to 53.7 percent in 2018 and 59.4 percent in 2019.
“This is a guy who has set the gold standard for our program. He just wills his way into doing things,” said Jon Torpey, the Panthers’ 10th-year head coach. “He had this ability to connect with every single guy on the team because he was so approachable, so humble, so down to earth, and everything was about what he could do to make your experience better. When the game is on the line, he is the guy you want in your corner.”
Lyndsey Boswell got the same impression. She met with Sampere in May before passing him along to her brother. Their father, Dickie, successfully campaigned a late model stock car out of their hometown of Friendship, Maryland, competing in 57 then-NASCAR Busch Series races spread over six seasons in the 1980s.
“NASCAR comes with a lot of really amazing people and just some good ol’ boys. It’s cliché but it’s true. They’re just down to earth and good, humble people,” Boswell said. “I found that in Davis pretty much right away. As soon as he left, I called my brother.”