Anze Kopitar and Adrian Kempe scored in the shootout, and the Los Angeles Kings beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 1-0 Thursday night for their fourth consecutive victory.

Jonathan Quick made 36 saves in his 52nd career shutout for the Kings, while Frederik Andersen made 30 saves in his 19th career shutout for the Leafs. The Maple Leafs were shut out for the first time all season, while the Kings were shut out for the sixth time this season.

"Quickie was exceptional again," Los Angeles coach Todd McLellan said. "It was a night where we played the type of game we probably had to play to win."

The combination of defensive brilliance and offensive ineptitude continued in the shootout: Michael Amadio had a largely open net in the second round but shot it into Andersen's pad — and then Auston Matthews whiffed on the puck on the other end.

Kopitar finally became the first person to put the puck in the net in the third round, but William Nylander matched him. After Kempe scored, Mitch Marner lost control of the puck to seal it for Los Angeles.

"That was a pretty even hockey game," Toronto coach Sheldon Keefe said. "Both goaltenders did a good job. ... It wasn't our greatest game or greatest effort by any means, but there's a team on the other side that did a good job as well."

WATCH | Leafs fall short against Kings in shootout:

Frederik Andersen made an unbelievable stop in the shoutout, but Adrian Kempe beat the Leafs' netminder in the next round and Mitch Marner couldn't keep the shootout going as Toronto fell to L.A. 1-0. 1:29

The Kings opened a nine-game homestand by extending the longest winning streak of their last-place season. They have won seven of their last 10 games, yet still have the Western Conference's fewest points and the NHL's second-fewest (58).

Toronto has lost on the first two stops of its three-game California road trip.

After three periods of scoreless regulation featuring 53 shots but few premium scoring chances, John Tavares took a hooking penalty 31 seconds into overtime, but Andersen was solid in net.

"It was great to play behind a team like that, that really made plays for me," Andersen said. "[Quick] played incredible down there, too, so I don't think that's on the offence. That's one of best in the league when he's on his game. He pulled out some great saves when we had the chances."

Nylander then got a breakaway with 1:13 to play, but Quick made a beautiful pad save that prompted Nylander to break his stick on the post in frustration.

Kasperi Kapanen's first-period breakaway shot off the post was likely the best scoring chance in the first 60 minutes. Both teams had solid chances in the third, but Quick and Andersen remained impenetrable.

❤️ Jack Campbell ❤️<br>❤️Jake Muzzin ❤️<br>❤️ Kyle Clifford ❤️<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GoKingsGo?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GoKingsGo</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/13KCliffy?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@13KCliffy</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/MapleLeafs?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@MapleLeafs</a> <a href="https://t.co/KNSBYmjgBh">pic.twitter.com/KNSBYmjgBh</a> —@LAKings

The game was a homecoming for Leafs forward Kyle Clifford, defenceman Jake Muzzin and goalie Jack Campbell. All three were Kings regulars who made their first returns to Staples Center since getting traded to Toronto over the last 14 months.

Clifford won two Stanley Cup titles while spending the past decade as a dependable two-way forward for the Kings, who drafted him in 2009. Los Angeles traded him to the Leafs on Feb. 5 in a deal including Campbell, the once-underachieving goalie who played his way into an NHL career with the Kings over the past two seasons.

"This place is special," Campbell said.