
A Dutch boxing champion who captured the WBO super featherweight title with a powerful, crowd-pleasing style.
Regilio Tuur outpointed Eugene Speed in Rotterdam on June 4, 1994, to win the WBO super featherweight championship. Born in Paramaribo, Suriname, he moved to the Netherlands as a child and found boxing there. His reign was short but intense, marked by exciting defenses and a hard-nosed approach that drew crowds. After retiring from fighting, he became a coach, passing on the disciplined techniques and fighting spirit that defined his own career. Tuur's victory made him a national sports hero in the Netherlands.
1965–1980
The latchkey kids. Raised during divorce, recession, and the end of the Cold War. Skeptical, self-reliant, media-literate. They invented indie culture, grunge, and the early internet — then watched the Boomers take credit.
Regilio was born in 1967, placing them squarely in the Generation X. The events that shaped this generation — economic uncertainty, the end of the Cold War, and the rise of personal computing — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1967
#1 Movie
The Jungle Book
Best Picture
In the Heat of the Night
#1 TV Show
The Andy Griffith Show
The world at every milestone
Summer of Love in San Francisco; first Super Bowl
Watergate break-in; last Apollo Moon mission
John Lennon shot and killed in New York
Internet adopts TCP/IP, creating the modern internet
Live Aid concerts raise money for Ethiopian famine
Pan Am Flight 103 bombed over Lockerbie
Princess Diana dies in Paris car crash; Harry Potter published
iPhone released; Great Recession begins
#MeToo movement; solar eclipse crosses the US
He won a bronze medal at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul as an amateur.
His nickname was 'The Turbo.'
He retired from professional boxing with a record of 46 wins (30 KOs) and 4 losses.
“I trained for one thing: to be world champion.”