Arvin Buchholz appeals from the judgment entered by the district court 1 on the jury’s verdict in favor of Rockwell International Corporation (Rockwell). We affirm.
Buchholz brought suit against Rockwell under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1), alleging that Rockwell refused to hire him as a test technician because of his age after he was terminated from his previous position during a reduction in force.
On appeal, Buchholz challenges the denial of his motion for a new trial, a ruling which we review for abuse of discretion.
See Gearin v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
I.
Buchholz first argues that the district court should have granted his motion for a new trial based on Rockwell’s failure to disclose certain items during discovery.
A. The Hill Complaint
Despite Buchholz’s request for information regarding age discrimination complaints filed against Rockwell “at any time since January 1, 1985,” and a magistrate judge’s order compelling an answer to that request, Rockwell failed to disclose an age discrimination complaint filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) by John Hill, a former employee, in August of 1994. Counsel for Buchholz first learned of the Hill complaint during the first day of trial. The district court ordered Rockwell to produce the Hill file immediately and asked counsel for Buchholz what other relief he sought. Counsel requested that Rockwell be ordered to provide the name of a “mystery witness” mentioned in an EEOC questionnaire that Hill completed in October of 1994. Rockwell complied. The court advised that it “would certainly give the Plaintiff more than the usual reign [sic], so to speak, on rebuttal if something develops on this.” The court also expressed its willingness to recess the trial to resolve the issue of the mystery witness.
The district court granted Buchholz’s request that he be permitted to take the deposition of the mystery witness. In a telephone conference following the deposition, counsel for Buchholz informed the court that he did not intend to call the witness, explaining that although the information, if available earlier, might have affected Buchholz’s approach, “at this point given the fact that much of [the witness’s] testimony is not directly relevant to the test tech position, but rather to other positions at Rockwell,” Buchholz would not call the person as a witness at trial.
Although Buchholz contends that had he known about the Hill complaint, he might have altered trial preparation and strategy decisions, he had the opportunity to review the witness’s testimony before the completion of the trial and to request relief.
See Atlas Pile Driving Co. v. DiCon Fin. Co.,
Moreover, we agree with the district court that the witness’s deposition testimony was not as indicative of discrimination as initially *149 anticipated and thus would not have been as helpful as expected. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to grant Buehholz a new trial on this ground.
B. The Courtier Notes
Buehholz requested “[a]ll documents that set out or reflect why Plaintiff was not hired____” Despite this request, Rockwell failed to disclose notes taken by human resources specialist Lynn Courtier during her interviews with the supervisors who failed to hire Buehholz. The notes were referred to on the third day of the five-day trial when human resources specialist Charlene Board-man (testifying in place of Courtier) stated that she had reviewed them in preparation for testifying. On the fourth day of trial, the district court ordered Rockwell to produce the notes. Buehholz asserts that the notes could have been used as a discovery tool and to impeach the testimony of several Rockwell employees.
We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Buehholz’s motion for a new trial on this ground. Counsel for Buehholz became aware of the notes on February 2, 1994, more than a year prior to trial, when during her deposition Courtier responded to several questions by saying, “I would have to refer to my notes,” and disclosed that the notes were stored in her office. Counsel for Buehholz replied, “I would assume that we are going to be requesting those.” Buehholz’s awareness of the existence of the notes more than a year prior to trial erodes his claim that he was prejudiced by their belated disclosure.
See Birchem,
Furthermore, the notes were ultimately disclosed, and Buehholz had the opportunity to use them at trial, which he declined.
Compare Greyhound,
II.
Buehholz next argues that he is entitled to a new trial based on the district court’s refusal to give a mixed motive jury instruction. Under the mixed motive analysis of
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
Buehholz contends that when he inquired as to why he was not hired for a test technician position, the hiring supervisor commented to the effect that the “young kids” whom he hired “sure were sharp.” Buehholz argues that this comment showed a specific link between a discriminatory animus and the supervisor’s decision not to hire him. In our view, however, this comment alone, if in fact made, would not entitle Buehholz to a
*150
Price Waterhouse
instruction. Although purportedly made by a decisionmaker, the comment did not link Buchholz’s nonseleetion with a discriminatory animus suggesting that the decisionmaker considered improper factors. Rather, it constituted an innocuous comment on the abilities of the new hires, whom the sixty-two-year-old supervisor simply described as “young kids.”
See Merrick v. Farmers Ins. Group,
III.
Buchholz argues that there was insufficient evidence to support a verdict in favor of Rockwell, contending that Rockwell failed to offer any evidence rebutting Buchholz’s prima facie ease of discrimination. Under the burden-shifting framework outlined in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
In explaining why they failed to hire Buchholz, the supervisors to whom his resume was routed testified that they did not remember ever receiving his resume and therefore did not consider him for a test technician position. Relying on
Turnes v. AmSouth Bank, N.A.,
Buchholz’s reliance on
Turnes
is misplaced, for Rockwell’s hiring supervisors did not claim that they could not remember why they considered but did not hire Buchholz. Rather, they explained that they did not even remember receiving his resume and that this was the reason they did not consider him. This explanation constituted an articulation of a specific, nondiscriminatory reason for Rockwell’s failure to hire Buchholz that raised a question of fact regarding Rockwell’s motivation.
See Considine v. Newspaper Agency Corp.,
IV.
Buchholz argues that the district court abused its discretion in admitting his applications for various positions at Rockwell and the reasons for his nonselection for those positions, contending that this evidence was
*151
irrelevant because it pertained to positions other than that of test technician. Buchholz, however, opened the door to this evidence by mentioning that he had applied for positions other than test technician, by describing his past experience at Rockwell and introducing favorable evaluations that he had received in previous positions, and by recounting his conversation with a hiring supervisor in which he expressed his dismay at not being hired as a test technician despite “everything [he] did.” The district court therefore did not abuse its broad discretion in admitting the applications and the reasons for Buchholz’s nonselection for the other positions.
See Paul v. Farmland Indus., Inc.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Michael J. Melloy, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Iowa.
