Michelle Tafoya discusses this annual act of kindness from Bill Belichick

Bill Belichick made up for the fact that he was a tough interview for Michelle Tafoya.

Bill Belichick carries a reputation that he’s a standoffish person who can be very cold at times.

But, as we’ve seen over the years, he’s capable of smiling and being a much brighter personality than often displayed. Players like Reggie Wayne have attested to Belichick’s kind and caring side — noting a time that Belichick told him to keep a $250,000 signing bonus without playing more than a month for the New England Patriots.

Longtime reporter Michelle Tafoya is another person who’s been close to Belichick over the years and has seen his giving side.

“I got a Christmas card from him this year. I have every year,” she said Richard Deitch’s podcast, as transcribed by WEEI. “I do feel like there’s a relationship there. It’s just, there have been some really fun great moments, and just some that have been more challenging. And I’m going to take some responsibility for that, asking bad questions.”

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Tafoya, who’s been a NFL reporter since 2004, discussed the not-so-fun moments with Belichick.

“You’re walking in knowing that it’s not going to be necessarily fun,” she said. “Some of that is on me. If I asked a question that was not a good question, he would let me know. Over the course of time, I tried to learn how to present questions to him in a way that was more intelligent. Look, I’ve been at this for a long time, so there was always room for growth and improvement with me. Always still is. It was always a little bit of a pit in the stomach.”

In Deitsch’s column for The Athletic, he revealed that Tafoya will be leaving NBC to be the co-chair of a political campaign for businessman Kendall Qualls.

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Sideline reporting shakeup coming to NBC’s Notre Dame coverage?

Could this happen?

A report from the New York Post indicates that Michelle Tafoya will leave sideline reporting after the NFL season. That means there will be a gap to fill on NBC’s Sunday Night Football coverage. While no replacement for Tafoya officially has been named, many signs point to recent fill-in Kathryn Tappen, the network’s sideline reporter for its Notre Dame coverage since 2014. That’s longer than anyone else currently on that broadcast team.

Just as the Irish are going through a coaching transition, this also could be a time of transition for their home TV partner. Mike Tirico is expected to replace Al Michaels as the Sunday Night Football play-by-play announcer next season. It certainly would be a heavy load to expect Tirico to handle both gigs at once. It already is a lot doing both the Irish and “Football Night in America” on the same weekend.

The times are changing indeed, and it’s happening in many ways.