Peter Tunks (born 30 August 1958 in Sydney, New South Wales) is an Australian former rugby league player for the South Sydney Rabbitohs, Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs, Penrith Panthers, New South Wales and the Australian national side. After that he played with a number of clubs in England.
Tunks finished in the top eight at the Rothmans Medal six times in his career, and was also voted the best prop in world rugby league twice in the 80s.
Tunks is a product of Marcellin College Randwick. Regarded as one of the best rugby league players to come out of this school, Tunks also represented NSW at rugby union as a schoolboy in 1976.
Graded with Souths in 1977, Tunks made his debut that year as a second row forward at eighteen years of age. Tunks narrowly missed selection for the 1978 Kangaroo tour when he was voted one of the top rookies of the year. In the off season Tunks contracted glandular fever, hepatitis and a kidney disease and missed part of the 1979 season.
Tunks made his State of Origin debut in 1981, the same year he led South Sydney to victory in the Panasonic Cup, scoring the winning try. In 1982 Tunks was told he would be touring with the Kangaroos but was not taken due to off field indiscretions.
In 1984 Tunks left Souths and went to the Bulldogs where Warren Ryan built a team around Tunks and Peter Kelly as prop forwards to create a style of play known as “Wozzaball”, with the team nicknamed “The Enforcers” due to the power of their defence, which at the end of the 1984 season conceded just a solitary penalty goal in almost four complete games. With both the Rabbitohs and Bulldogs, Tunks would frequently run wide of the ruck, so that his try tally was unusually large for a front row forward.
Tunks played in four grand finals in five seasons for the Bulldogs, winning three. He toured New Zealand in 1985 with the Kangaroos and was voted player of the tour ahead of Wally Lewis, Mal Meninga, Peter Sterling and others. In 1986, Tunks refused to tour with the Kangaroos and he also refused to make himself available for the 1988 World Cup Final against New Zealand the week after he captained the Bulldogs to the premiership.