Ole Miss’ athletic department reported 13 violations to the NCAA from January through May, according to the Clarion Ledger‘s Daniel Paulling, who obtained the documents through an open records request.

The main cause? Cell phones made up five of the 13 across all sports.

Women’s basketball, track and field, men’s basketball, volleyball and the football team were all implicated. With respect to the football program, the Ledger gave a description of the violations.

An assistant coach pocket-dialed a recruit on Oct. 23 after speaking with the recruit two days earlier; an assistant coach was attempting to reach a high school coach in the call monitoring app used but accidentally called the coach’s son, a recruit; a coach impermissibly responded to the text of a recruit on his way for an unofficial visit; and a coach called a player who had been dismissed from his previous team one day before permission to contact was verified by Ole Miss.

An assistant coach had his call with a commit dropped while they were talking on Jan. 5, but the recruit called back immediately to finish their conversation.

The trouble occurred when another assistant coach impermissibly called the recruit the next day. The call-monitoring app the coaching staff uses didn’t notify the second coach it was an improper call because the first coach didn’t call back following the dropped call. The system allows for a coach to call back because of a dropped call.

No serious violations occurred, and you can read all of them at the Clarion Ledger here.