Alberto Tomba and Vreni Schneider once again are king and queen of the hill.
The Italian and Swiss stars each won the slalom and giant slalom title, plus the most coveted overall title.Schneider, 30, clinched the overall cup for the third time, while Tomba earned it for the first after a sensational season studded with 11 victories.
Schneider said, "Did I really do it? Is it true?" after winning Sunday's final World Cup slalom and taking the overall by just six points over Germany's Katja Seizinger.
In Bormio, Schneider increased the number of specialty cups she's won to 11, six in slalom and five in giant slalom. Her World Cup victories now stand at 54.
Tomba, a three-time Olympic champion, now has eight specialty cups, four in each slalom and giant slalom. As a rule he never enters the downhill and super-G events, so winning the overall was an even greater achievement for him.
Not just Tomba scored big on the Italian team however.
Teammate Peter Runggaldier claimed the Super-G title after winning his first race ever in Whistler, British Columbia, and finishing second in Kitzbuehel, Austria, and Bormio.
Kristian Ghedina narrowly missed the downhill title, which was won by France's Luc Alphand, the only non-Italian to take home a globe on the men's side.
Norway's Ole Christian Furuseth won the men's slalom Sunday, returning to the top spot on the podium for this discipline after a five-year drought.
The women's super-G went to Seizinger, who earned her third consecutive title. American skier Picabo Street concluded an amazing season in Bormio, scoring her sixth downhill victory of the year. She easily won the World Cup downhill title, performing a feat never before done by an American woman.
Without skiing any slalom at all and only a few giant slaloms, she finished fifth this season.