HOUSTON -- In his first two games for the Houston Texans, quarterback Brock Osweiler has showed he is capable of making big throws.

He also has shown he is still prone to throwing interceptions.

In Sunday’s 19-12 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs, Osweiler was 19-for-33 for 268 yards, with a touchdown and two interceptions. In the Texans' Week 1 victory over the Chicago Bears, Osweiler also had a first-quarter interception in the Texans’ Week 1 victory.

Osweiler said the pick against the Bears and the first interception against the Chiefs were just inaccurate throws.

Texans coach Bill O'Brien said he isn't concerned with Brock Osweiler's three turnovers in two games. AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith

“If I just put it in front of [Braxton] Miller, I think we have a completion there,” Osweiler said. “I think they are just two inaccurate throws that certainly can be cleaned up, because I take great pride in my accuracy and our timing and we work every single day to build that at practice. So, I really think those are two things that can be easily cleaned up.”

Last season in eight games with the Denver Broncos, Osweiler threw 10 touchdowns and six interceptions. Though he has three interceptions in two games this season, Texans head coach Bill O’Brien said he is not concerned.

"I think I have to do a better job of coaching him just on some of the things that we're looking at from a defensive standpoint," O'Brien said. "I know that he's going to work hard not to do that. I'm not concerned about that at all."

But, Osweiler also showed why the Texans gave him the big four-year, $72 million contract during the offseason, making some big throws against the Chiefs.

On the Texans’ first series, Osweiler threw a 53-yard pass to rookie receiver Will Fuller deep on the right side of the field. However, his first interception of the game came three plays later in the end zone.

On Osweiler’s touchdown pass, he found Pro Bowl receiver DeAndre Hopkins, who beat cornerback Marcus Peters on the play, down the right side of the field for a 27-yard touchdown. Hopkins finished with seven catches for 113 yards and a touchdown.

“I just stuck with the route and trusted Brock just to put the ball in there and let me make a play,” Hopkins said.

Osweiler made a big throw to preserve the Texans’ victory with less than four minutes to go in the game. Facing a third-and-17 at the Kansas City 42, Osweiler hit Hopkins up the middle for a 16-yard catch. Though Hopkins couldn’t get the first down, it gave kicker Nick Novak a more manageable 43-yard field goal that put the Texans up by two scores again.

After the Week 1 victory, Osweiler had said he was focused on improving the production in the red zone and not settling for field goals. On Sunday, the team was 0-for-4 with an interception and three field goals in the red zone. O'Brien said Houston's biggest problems inside the 20 came because of the penalties they have committed, not the playcalling.

Still, Osweiler said he thinks the production in the red zone will be something the offense will continue to focus on after watching the tape of Sunday’s game.

Though Osweiler said he knows there are areas where he and the offense need to improve, at the end of the day, he is happy with where the Texans are, sitting at 2-0 atop the AFC South, as they go on the road to play the New England Patriots on Thursday night.

“If I just protect the football with the way our defense is playing right now, with the way [Shane] Lechler's playing, the way our running game is going -- good things are going to happen for this football team,” Osweiler said. “Obviously, my main emphasis going into this practice week is protecting the football. I think if I can do that, we'll continue to put the offense in good situations.

“We have a very high standard for what we expect our offense to do this season. Have we met it? Absolutely not. But are we working every single day to meet it? Absolutely."