
The last time Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning finished a season with more interceptions than touchdowns was his rookie year with the Indianapolis Colts in 1998.
In 2015, he enters the bye week with 10 interceptions and 7 touchdowns.
"He's got some decisions I know he'd like to have back," Kubiak said Monday. "When you're the quarterback, you're the guy pulling the trigger all the time. We know we have to improve in the turnover department. As a coach, you always look at it and say, 'Okay, were we doing something on that route, maybe, that I shouldn't be asking him to do?'
"That's how you look at things. There is no skating around the fact that we're turning the ball over too much. He and I have got to get that improved, and we will. That's important for our team."
Manning recently admitted that at times, he feels he may be trying to do to much, something Kubiak explained is actually what has probably made him so good over the course of his career.
"I think that's his nature," Kubiak added. "He tries to make every play because he's so smart and has done it for so many years. Sometimes you call a route and they've got the perfect coverage for it. Those are things you've got to work through. It's also me having him in comfortable routes that he has repped and done from a continuous standpoint. Like I continue to say, that's how I look at myself to make sure I'm putting him in as many comfortable situations as I can."
After their bye week in Week 7, the Broncos meet the Green Bay Packers in Sunday Night Football on November 1.
Former Missouri Tiger and current Denver Broncos linebacker Shane Ray sprained his MCL and will miss the next four to six weeks
San Diego Chargers
Chargers lose second game in a row to the undefeated Green Bay Packers, move to 2-4 on the season
San Diego's loss a case of two aspects in its game

The San Diego Chargers were largely successful passing the ball against the Green Bay Packers Sunday, as can be inferred from just looking at the stat line of quarterback Philip Rivers—43 of 65 for 503 yards, 2 touchdowns and 0 interceptions.
"He's amazing," Chargers head coach Mike McCoy said Monday. "The best word to describe Philip is he's special in all areas and it's not just on the football field, it's off the football field. He's even a better person, a better human being. He does it all for us and we're very fortunate to happen."
Where the Chargers struggled was in the rushing game, where running backs Melvin Gordon, Branden Oliver and Danny Woodhead combined for 21 attempts and only 60 rushing yards, for 2.9 yards per attempt.
That noted, McCoy won't pin his team's struggles on one area.
"It's not just the runner," he said. "It's everybody doing their job better, winning their one-on-one battles up front, so we're going to continue to grind it out. You have to run the football in this league, so we'll find a way, but the great thing is we have the flexibility to do what we did because we had to do it throwing the football."
The Chargers look to piece it all together this Sunday against the division rival Oakland Raiders.
Here's a very interesting stat about Philip Rivers' individual game against the Packers
Oakland Raiders
2-3 Raiders back from bye this week
39-year-old Charles Woodson intends to play for another decade
Raiders signed a wide receiver