The Dufour-Lapointe sisters swept the podium as Justine took victory ahead of Chloe and Maxime ©Twitter

Canada’s Justine Dufour-Lapointe led home an unprecedented podium sweep in the women’s moguls event at the International Ski Federation (FIS) Freestyle Skiing World Cup as she finished ahead of sisters Chloé and Maxime in Val Saint Come today.

World and Olympic champion Justine, who at 21 is the youngest of the siblings, claimed a points total of 86.49 and Chloé clinched silver by virtue of a score of 85.09.

Maxime then ensured the trio monopolised the medals as she took bronze, edging Perrine Lafont of France to complete a remarkable result never before seen at a Freestyle Skiing World Cup.

Justine’s victory saw her close the gap in the overall standings to 16 points, with Chloé hanging on to her lead on a score of 140 points.

"At the top, I realised that it was possible and I said right away: no, I have to come back to the present moment," Justine said.

"I still had a single descent in which I had to give my maximum. 

"I did it - I am proud of myself, but so proud of the three of us."

The home crowd had yet another Mikaël Kingsbury triumph to celebrate as he extended his record number of World Cup wins to 30, reigning supreme in the men’s competition.

Kingsbury, an Olympic silver medallist in moguls at Sochi 2014 before winning the dual moguls world title a year later, finished with a score of 93.42 points, 5.68 more than nearest challenger Matt Graham of Australia.

Laurent Dumais kept the Canadian dominance going as he sealed bronze with a total of 85.86.

Canada's Mikaël Kingsbury continued his dominance of the moguls discipline with his 30th World Cup victory ©Getty Images
Canada's Mikaël Kingsbury continued his dominance of the moguls discipline with his 30th World Cup victory ©Getty Images

Kingsbury remains at the summit of the men’s leaderboard, with his victory in Val Saint-Come moving him to a total of 200 points.

Frenchman Benjamin Cavet fell even further behind as he languished down in seventh place today, meaning he now trails the formidable Canadian by 84 points.

"Doing a score of 93 points, I thought I could never do that in my sport," Kingsbury said.

"Basically, I just did a copy and paste of my plan to each of my runs and it worked. 

"To do it in front of my family and my friends and with all this atmosphere, really, it's a perfect day."

Today’s competition was due to be the third moguls stop on the Freestyle Skiing World Cup but an event in Lake Placid, due to be held last week, was cancelled in December owing to warm weather and a lack of snow.

Calgary, host city of the 1988 Winter Olympic Games, is due to stage the next moguls event next Saturday (January 30).