Argentine Juan Martin Del Potro served notice of his strong form ahead of the Australian Open starting today when he crushed defending champion Bernard Tomic 6-3 6-1 in the final of the Sydney International yesterday.

The 2009 US Open champion simply overpowered the talented but inconsistent Australian Tomic at a packed Ken Rosewall Arena, bringing the one-sided title match to a close with a booming service winner after 53 minutes of play to claim his 18th career title.

Playing near faultless tennis, Del Potro served with venom and unleashed powerful forehands and backhands that forced a string of errors from the overwhelmed Tomic.

“Finals are never easy, but I was surprised by my level... I think I played great,” said Del Potro.

“My forehand worked perfectly, I made a lot of winners, many aces, played good slices. Every long rally we played I won all of them.”

Seeded fifth at Melbourne Park, the 25-year-old looks to be approaching the sort of form that secured him his greatest triumph at Flushing Meadows before a wrist injury nearly ended his career.

“In Melbourne playing five-set matches, the body has to respond 100 per cent all the time,” he added.

“I think I did good preparation during the off-season, and I will see what happens next week.”

Tomic, who faces world number one Rafa Nadal in the first round of the Australian Open this week, admitted Del Potro had been “too good” when the pair shook hands at the net.

American John Isner earlier claimed his second Auckland Open title with a 7-6 7-6 victory over an inspired Lu Yen-Hsun.

While Lu ultimately came up short in his first final, Spanish qualifier Garbine Muguruza hammered Klara Zakopalova 6-4 6-0 in hers to clinch a maiden WTA title at the Hobart International.

Japan’s Kei Nishikori was also a winner yesterday when the lucky loser finalist beat world number seven Tomas Berdych 6-4 7-5 to win the Kooyong Classic exhibition tournament.

In Auckland, Isner crashed down 23 aces but it would take more than his big serve to stop the Taiwanese, who put on a brilliant display of shot-making in his first ATP final.

Lu, number 62 in the world, stunned David Ferrer to end the Spaniard’s three-year reign as champion in the semi-finals but Isner held his nerve when it mattered to edge two tiebreaks and avoid another upset.

“I played exceptionally well and I needed every bit of it to come out on top,” said the American, who is seeded 13th for Melbourne Park and, like Del Potro, will meet a qualifier in the first round.

In Hobart, Muguruza’s dominance and aggression reduced the experienced Zakopalova to tears of frustration in the second set of the 70-minute match.

The 20-year-old was all over Zakopalova’s serve from the start and, having fended off one match point, the Czech conceded the contest with her third double fault.

“I can’t explain in words how happy I feel,” Muguruza said.

“Last year I was injured for six months and it’s amazing to be here.”

It was the second day in a row that a qualifier had won her first WTA title at an Australian Open warm-up after Tsvetana Pironkova claimed the Sydney International women’s title on Friday.

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