OPINION
Charles R. Pottenger worked for the Potlatch Corporation, a diversified forest products company, for 32 years until he was discharged in April 2000 at age 60. During his tenure at Potlatch, Pottenger rose to Group Vice President of Pulp and Paper, reporting directly to Potlatch’s President, Richard Paulson. After his dismissal, Pottenger sued Potlatch alleging that he was forced to retire in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621 et seq., and the Idaho Human Rights Act, Idaho Code §§ 67-5901 et seq. Pottenger also claims intentional infliction of emotional distress and defamation under Idaho law. The district court dismissed all Pottenger’s claims on summary judgment, and we affirm.
I
Pottenger joined Potlatch in 1968 after receiving his Ph.D. in paper technology. He held a variety of positions in the company, generally moving up through the ranks. In 1993, he became a group vice president, and at the date of his termination he was Group Vice President of Pulp and Paper. As a group vice president, Pottenger reported directly to the President and Chief Operating Officer of Potlatch, Richard Paulson, who reported to the CEO, Pendleton Siegel. Pottenger worked in Lewiston, Idaho, and oversaw Potlatch’s operations in Idaho and Arkansas, including the Idaho Pulp and Paperboard Division (“IPPD”) based in Lewi-ston. After the cost of capital, IPPD lost $63.7 million in 1997, $67.4 million in 1998, $85.0 million in 1999, and $14.5 million in the first quarter of 2000.
In January 1999, shortly before he became president of Potlatch, Paulson attended an executive training course at the University of Michigan. After attending the training course, Paulson decided that Potlatch needed to make “real and significant” changes in order to improve its performance. On November 23,1999, Potten-ger and three of his colleagues responsible for pulp and paperboard met with Paulson in Spokane, Washington, to talk about turning the pulp and paperboard business around. At the meeting, Paulson characterized Pottenger and his team as an “old management team” using an “old business model.”
In February 2000, Paulson gave Potten-ger his performance review for 1999. Pot-tenger received an MR- rating. In the Potlatch rating system, MR+ means that the individual has more than met the requirements of the job. MR means that the individual has fully met the requirements of the job. MR- means that there is some reason for concern. MM means that *744 the individual has met the minimum requirements for the job. Out of twelve managers listed in Potlatch’s records that year, two received MR+ ratings, six received MR ratings, three received MR-ratings, and one received an MM rating. On the review form, Paulson characterized Pottenger’s strengths as “smart,” “knows business,” “loyal to Potlatch,” “technical knowledge,” “enthusiastic leader,” and “wants Potlatch to succeed.” He also wrote the following under areas for improvement: “break victim mentality in IPPD,” “be a strong leader in stopping the ‘mill town’ mentality in Lewiston,” “set higher expectations for people,” and “think in terms of opportunities and develop change strategies to get there.”
In March 2000, the Potlatch management committee, which included Potten-ger, met to discuss cost-cutting strategies. Because the company was in financial trouble, the committee members made a commitment to each other to eliminate “deadwood,” and to do so quickly. At the end of March, the committee distributed a memo announcing that the company was embarking on a course of significant change in response to poor earnings. The changes included a wide array of cost-cutting measures (including cuts in travel, mail, cell phone, and trade association expenses). The memo also announced that over the next two months the committee would be “evaluating where to make significant reductions in the number of salaried positions.”
The management committee met again on April 12, 2000, to discuss the company’s plan for a reduction in force. During the day, Paulson and Siegel (Potlatch’s CEO) met separately from the committee for 10-15 minutes to discuss Pottenger. Paulson described his concerns that Pottenger was not capable of bringing about real and significant change in the Lewiston operation. At their meeting, Paulson and Siegel decided to fire Pottenger.
Paulson told Pottenger of his termination on April 18, 2000. When Pottenger asked Paulson why he was being fired, Paulson stated that he lacked confidence that Pottenger had the commitment to make the hard decisions necessary to make Potlatch successful. 1 Paulson offered Pottenger an enhanced severance package as part of his termination. Without the enhancement, Pottenger was entitled to 52 weeks of severance pay (equaling his yearly base pay of $324,120) and one year of employee benefits (medical, dental, and life insurance). After a year, Potlatch would pay monthly retirement benefits of $15,134.74 and 75% of Pottenger’s medical, dental, and life insurance premiums. The enhanced severance package included an additional 26 weeks of base pay (for a total of 78 weeks or $486,180) and an additional monthly payment thereafter of $5,401.74 (for a total monthly payment of $20,536.48). The enhanced package also offered fully-paid medical, dental, and life insurance until age 65 (the mandatory retirement age for executives at Potlatch), and 75% payment thereafter. In return for the enhanced severance package, Paulson asked Potten-ger to sign a separation agreement waiving any claim under the Age Discrimination Employment Act.
The next day, the company distributed a memo to all employees from Paulson stating that Pottenger had “elected to take early retirement.” Pottenger had declined Paulson’s offer the previous day to help *745 write the notice. The memo stated that Craig Nelson, formerly the Consumer Products Division Vice President, was assuming Pottenger’s position. At the time, Pottenger was 60 years old and Nelson was 48.
Pottenger ultimately declined the enhanced severance package and refused to waive his claims under the ADEA. He then brought suit in federal district court claiming age discrimination under the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621 et seq., and the Idaho Human Rights Act, 2 Idaho Code § 67-5909, and claiming defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The district court granted Potlatch’s motion for summary judgment. The court found that Pottenger had made out a pri-ma facie case of age discrimination, but that Potlatch had articulated a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for discharging Pottenger — that he was not prepared to make the tough decisions necessary to turn around the Idaho Pulp and Paper Division. The court found that Pottenger had not raised a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether the reason articulated by Potlatch was pretext. Pottenger, the court noted, did not contest that IPPD lost money during his tenure as head of that division. Rather he attacked the company’s decision to address the losses by replacing him. The court also rejected Pottenger’s disparate impact age discrimination claim because of the unreliability of his statistical evidence.
The court also granted summary judgment against Pottenger on his defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims. It found that the company’s statement that Pottenger had “elected” early retirement did not constitute defamation per se. It concluded that Potten-ger had not supported his intentional infliction of emotional distress claim because there was no evidence in the record tending to show that Potlatch’s conduct was “extreme and outrageous.”
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Frank v. United Airlines, Inc.,
II
A. Disparate Treatment Age Discrimination Claim
The ADEA makes it “unlawful for an employer ... to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual [who is at least 40 years old] ... because of such individual’s age.” 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1). To prove age discrimination under a disparate treatment theory, Pottenger must show that his age “ ‘actually played a role in [Potlatch’s decisionmaking] process and had a determinative influence on the outcome.’ ”
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc.,
Pottenger has made out a prima facie case of age discrimination. He was 60 years old; his most recent performance review grade of MR- was not outstanding, but indicated that he was meeting the requirements of the job; he was discharged; and he was replaced by Craig
*746
Nelson, then 43 years old, a substantially younger employee with equal or inferior qualifications.
See Coleman v. Quaker Oats Co.,
Pottenger may establish pretext through evidence showing that Potlatch’s explanation is unworthy of belief or through evidence showing that discrimination more likely motivated its decision. Pottenger need not rely on only one type of evidence, and he has offered evidence both to cast doubt on Potlatch’s credibility and to show a discriminatory motive.
Id.
at 143,
Pottenger advances several reasons that, in his view, undermine Potlatch’s explanation of his discharge. They include positive comments in his performance review, shifting justifications for his dismissal, the brevity of the meeting at which the president and CEO reached their decision to discharge him, and the procedures followed in his termination. Considering all of Pottenger’s evidence together, however, we conclude that he has not created a genuine issue of material fact. Pottenger’s performance review did contain some positive comments, but it also contained negative comments specifically singling out concerns with his performance in managing IPPD. Potlatch’s proffered explanation does not state that Pottenger was incompetent or a generally bad employee; rather, it states that Potlatch lacked confidence that Pottenger could help turn the company around. Instead of casting doubt on Potlatch’s explanation, the statements in the performance review are consistent with it. Moreover, although “ ‘fundamentally different justifications for an employer’s action ... give rise to a genuine issue of fact with respect to pretext,’ ”
Payne v. Nonvest Corp.,
Finally, the duration of the meeting between Paulson and Siegel at which they made the termination decision and the manner of Pottenger’s discharge do not create a factual issue regarding the company’s credibility. The meeting between Paulson and Siegel at which they ultimately made the decision to terminate Potten-ger was short, but it obviously came at the end of a much longer process of evaluation and deliberation. There is also little evidence of an established formal or informal company procedure for discharging high-level employees. In fact, when Pottenger himself discharged the then-head of the Idaho Pulp and Paper Division in 1997, he did so in a manner similar to his own discharge. Potlatch’s failure to follow some unspecified procedure in its treat *747 ment of Pottenger does not cast any doubt on its proffered reason for his termination.
To show discriminatory motive, Pottenger states that Paulson made comments referring to an “old management team,” an “old business model,” and “deadwood.” Remarks can constitute evidence of discrimination. The Supreme Court has held that telling an employee he “was so old [he] must have come over on the Mayflower” and “was too damn old to do [his] job” constituted evidence of age discrimination.
Reeves,
Paulson’s remarks in this case do not sufficiently support an inference of age discrimination so as to create a triable issue of material fact that would defeat summary judgment. In the context of this case, the phrase “old business model,” does not support an inference of age discrimination. Similar to the language in Rose, the phrase is a colloquialism not generally associated with the target’s age. Nor does Paulson’s use of the term “old management team” during the same meeting create a triable issue of fact. Similarly, the management committee’s use of the term “deadwood” does not suggest age discrimination. The Oxford English Dictionary defines “deadwood” as “[a] person or thing regarded as useless or unprofitable; a hindrance or impediment.” 4 Oxford English Dictionary 293 (2d ed.1989).
Pottenger also contends that the company’s June 2000 reduction in force (“RIF”) disproportionately affected older employees. However, the statistical analysis of the RIF offered by Pottenger is insufficient to raise a triable issue of discrimination. A plaintiff may use statistics to show an intent to discriminate.
See, e.g., Coleman,
*748
Pottenger’s statistical analysis of the RIF takes into account only two variables — the employee’s age at the time of the RIF and whether the employee was terminated. The numbers show a statistically significant relationship between these two variables, but this court and others have treated skeptically statistics that fail to account for other relevant variables.
See Coleman,
Pottenger’s expert had data about other relevant variables besides age and termination status, yet his statistical analysis makes no attempt to take these variables into account.
See Coleman,
Pottenger also argues discriminatory motive may be inferred from the fact that his replacement was only 43 years old and that shortly before his discharge the company moved a younger employee ahead of him on the successor list for CEO. Evidence that forms part of the prima facie case may also be considered to show that a proffered explanation is pretextual.
Reeves,
We have considered all of Pottenger’s evidence of pre-text and conclude that it does not refute Potlatch’s basic rationale for Pottenger’s termination — that IPPD was losing money and the company lacked faith that Pottenger was the one to turn IPPD around. Potlatch has leeway to make subjective business decisions, even bad ones.
See Coleman,
B. Disparate Impact Age Discrimination Claim
The Supreme Court has not addressed whether plaintiffs may bring disparate impact claims under the ADEA, but this circuit permits such claims.
See Katz v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal.,
To make out a prima facie case of disparate impact, Pottenger must show “(1) the occurrence of certain outwardly neutral employment practices, and (2) a significantly adverse or disproportionate impact on persons of a particular [age] produced by the employer’s facially neutral acts or practices.”
Katz,
The district court found that Pot-latch had discredited Pottenger’s statistical evidence and therefore dismissed his disparate impact claim. Summary judgment is appropriate when statistics do not support a disparate impact analysis.
See Katz,
In the context of this case, Pottenger’s disparate impact claim nonetheless fails because Pottenger was not terminated as part of the RIF. When Potlatch discharged Pottenger in April, the RIF was under consideration, but it did not actually begin until June. Pottenger argues, however, that his discharge was functionally part of the RIF because the enhanced severance package offered to him was similar in structure (though not in dollar amount) to that suggested for use in the RIF, and because he was given 45 days to consider the package, as had been suggested for employees subject to the RIF. Pottenger acknowledges, however, that when Pot-latch terminated him, the company did not use the objective, four-step evaluation process used to identify employees to be ter *750 minated as part of the RIF. Moreover, Pottenger was a high-level executive,-while the RIF targeted rank-and-file employees. To bring a disparate impact claim, Potten-ger must show that he was subject to the particular employment practice with the alleged disparate impact. Because Potten-ger was not formally or functionally subject to the RIF, his disparate impact claim cannot survive summary judgment.
C. State-Law Tort Claims
Finally, we affirm the district court’s summary judgment dismissal of Pottenger’s state-law tort claims. Pot-latch’s statement that Pottenger “elected to take early retirement,” even if false, was not defamatory. Under Idaho law, defamatory statements are actionable without allegation and proof of special damages if they impute to the plaintiff 1) a criminal offense; 2) a loathsome disease; 3) a matter incompatible with his trade, business, profession, or office; or 4) serious sexual misconduct.
Yoakum v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,
Pottenger’s intentional infliction of emotional distress claim also fails. In order to prove intentional infliction of emotional distress under Idaho law, Pot-tenger must show that Potlatch’s conduct was “extreme and outrageous” and either “intentionally or recklessly” caused “severe emotional distress.”
Brown v. Matthews Mortuary, Inc.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Pottenger and Paulson characterize Paul-son's words slightly differently, but the parties agree to the substance of the remarks.
. The Idaho Human Rights Act incorporates the major protections of the ADEA into state law. See Idaho Code §§ 67-5901, 67-5909. The parties have not separately briefed the state and federal discrimination claims, and we treat them together.
. Pottenger also alleges defamation
per quod
— a broader category of defamation that allows a plaintiff to show injury from a statement based on extrinsic evidence or innuendo.
See Gough v. Tribune-Journal Co.,
