Here is another example where AM could throw the coaches, o-line, special teams (field goal kicker, punter, punt returns, kick returns, Frost for not hiring a special teams coach) and refs under the bus but he bears the brunt of the blame and keeps working hard to get better. Offenses designed around QB runs are not my preference, but it would be interesting to see what he could have done with (at the very least) a coach with average competence and average offensive line & special teams play.
Unfortunate Frost does not understand risk and reward and has not learned from previous seasons that AM needs to stay healthy to be effective and QB's in an offense designed around QB runs don't last full seasons in the B1G. For example, Nebraska was up 21-3 against Buffalo with 8:54 left in the fourth and the ball at the Buffalo 48 and Frost calls a QB run which exposed AM to a defender who twisted/spun him to the ground in the backfield. Considering the circumstances (opponent, score, game clock, field position, etc.) why risk letting your QB get hit/twisted/spun in that situation for a small reward? Bring in extra blockers and hand the ball to your third-string RB.
Use AM's athleticism to move the pocket, keep passing plays alive with his feet (which he can do when healthy) or grab some yards and get down or out-of-bounds when there is nothing open downfield, but designed QB runs & hits (especially unnecessary QB runs & hits) should be significantly reduced. When AM is healthy he is a good passer, but health has never been there for a full season which, as alluded to, he could blame others but as a leader he takes the high road.