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San Jose Sharks' Tyler Kennedy, left, and Patrick Marleau celebrate Marleau's goal against the Vancouver Canucks during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Vancouver, B.C., on Thursday October 10, 2013.DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press

The San Jose Sharks have made beating the Vancouver Canucks a habit of late.

Thursday night was no different.

Antti Niemi made 25 saves and Matt Pelech's first NHL goal stood up as the winner as the Sharks stayed perfect on the young season by downing the Canucks 4-1 for a ninth straight victory over their Pacific Division rivals.

"It was a test for us to come on the road and play in this building again," said Sharks head coach Todd McClellan. "There weren't any freebies. A good one for us to play in."

Marc-Edouard Vlasic, Patrick Marleau and Brent Burns, into an empty net, also scored for the Sharks (4-0-0), who beat the Canucks 4-1 in both teams' season opener after sweeping Vancouver four straight in the first round of last year's playoffs.

San Jose, which also won all three meetings during the 2013 regular season, has not lost to the Canucks (3-2-0) since Jan. 21, 2012.

"We're just deep, we're really, really deep and we want to come at you every night," said Sharks captain Joe Thornton, who along with Logan Couture, added two assists. "We have been doing that early on."

The backbreaker was Marleau's goal that made it 3-1 midway through the second period. Despite trailing 2-0 after the first, the Canucks managed to cut the San Jose lead in half with Mike Santorelli's fourth goal in three games at 10:20, only to see Marleau score on a one-timer just 95 seconds later.

"No matter what happened or where we struggled, we crawl back into it (at) 2-1. We need to at least play with that for a little bit and not get scored on so quickly," said Canucks coach John Tortorella. "Really that was a gimme. We were just too slow. We turn it over when we don't need to and then we don't react defensively after the turnover."

Canucks goaltender Roberto Luongo held his team in with 25 stops, but said Vancouver needed a better start.

"Obviously the first period hurt us. We've made comebacks the last couple of games but against good teams like that it's tough to get out of a hole," he said. "I thought our first period we were a little bit tentative.

"Against a team like that you got to play 60 minutes if you want to give yourself a chance."

Sharks forward Tomas Hertl, who became the talk of the NHL after scoring four times in Tuesday's 9-2 win over the New York Rangers, was held pointless but was still noticeable as part of a dominant San Jose first line that includes Thornton and Burns.

San Jose led 3-1 after 40 minutes and had a good chance to extend the lead five minutes into the third, but Luongo kept Vancouver in it with a breakaway stop on Hertl.

The Canucks, who had come back from two-goal deficits against the Calgary Flames and the New Jersey Devils, showed little life until midway through the period. Their new puck-pressure style eventually started to gain a bit of time in the Sharks zone, but they rarely threatened Niemi's crease.

"You've got to give them some credit. They've got a good team over there, play a great system," said Canucks captain Henrik Sedin. "You've going to have games like this where you have to win the one-on-one battles and we didn't do that enough."

Vancouver pulled Luongo with 3:08 to go in the period, but Burns scored into an empty net with 2:19 to play.

"They locked it down pretty well," said Tortorellla, whose team had just six shots in the third. "It's not like we're playing against no one out there but we need to have more people going to play against a balanced team like that."

Vlasic opened the scoring at 12:16 of the first period by finishing off a nice passing play. The San Jose defenceman took a feed from Burns off the rush in the high slot and snapped a shot blocker side on Luongo.

Niemi came up big on a Vancouver power play later in the first, with big stops on both Alexander Edler and Jason Garrison.

Luongo then stopped Burns on another good chance before Pelech doubled the Sharks' lead with 58 second. The nephew of Vancouver general manager Mike Gillis chipped a pass from behind the Canucks' net up into the top corner past Luongo.

"It felt awesome," said the 26-year-old, who was playing in just his ninth NHL game. "It was a really good feeling to see that go in."

Notes: The teams play twice more this season, Nov. 7 in San Jose and Nov. 14 in Vancouver. ... Santorelli, who scored the winner in the Canucks' 3-2 overtime victory on Tuesday against the New Jersey Devils, wasn't credited with the goal Wednesday. The Burnaby, B.C., native is the first Vancouver player to record consecutive OT winners in franchise history. ... The Canucks host the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday before heading out on a season-high seven-game road trip. San Jose is home to the Ottawa Senators the same night. ... Canucks right-winger Zack Kassian will be eligible to return to the lineup on Saturday after serving his eight-game suspension (three pre-season, five regular) after breaking the jaw of Edmonton Oilers centre Sam Gagner with a high stick.

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