This appeal calls upon us, in the course of determining whether an employer transgressed the law in its dealings with a former employee, to map the much traveled but little understood intersection between Rule 56 of the Civil Rules and the burden-shifting framework for discrimination cases first crafted by the Court in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
I. BACKGROUND
Recognizing the dictates of Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c), we scan the record in the light most congenial to the summary judgment loser and draw all reasonable inferences to his benefit.
In 1974, Radio Corporation of America (RCA) hired plaintiff-appellant Samuel Mes-nick, a lawyer by training, to work as a senior contracts administrator at its plant in Burlington, Massachusetts. Mesnick was then fifty-one years of age. He was promoted several times, eventually becoming manager of contracts administration. In 1986, defendant-appellee General Electric Company (GE) purchased RCA’s business and installed new management at the Burlington facility. Achilles Georgiou became director of finance, and thus, Mes-nick’s immediate superior. Georgiou discussed Mesnick’s job performance with Mesnick’s former supervisors, receiving mixed reviews. Georgiou was told good things about Mesnick’s technical competence. He was also told, however, that Mesnick had at times shown himself to be a vulgar, bigoted, sexist lout who insulted subordinates, offended clients, drank to excess during lunch, and so forth. On March 7, 1987, Georgiou wrote his initial evaluation of Mesnick’s performance. It was largely negative. 1 In closing, Georgiou suggested that Mesnick ought to “pursue a private career of a federal procurement consultant.” Instead of the $4,000 raise that he had anticipated, Mesnick received a $2,000 raise.
Later on, a meeting was held in which Mesnick complained to Georgiou about unfair treatment in these matters. At the same time, the men discussed an expected reorganization of the contracts department (the Department). As part of this reorganization, GE planned to instate a supervisory position, the holder of which would be in charge of departmental operations at both Burlington and GE’s facility in Huntsville, Alabama. 2 The new position entailed many of the plaintiff’s previous responsibilities. Mesnick expressed an interest in finding out more about the job, although he voiced some reservations about the involvement of “the hanging judge” — an apparent *821 reference to Georgiou — in the selection process.
Following this unfruitful meeting, Mes-nick attempted to go over Georgiou’s head. On April 23, 1987, he sent a memorandum to Salvatore Capodici, the Burlington plant’s top executive. In the memorandum, Mesnick remonstrated, generally, about Georgiou’s leadership of the Department; complained, specifically, about Sherman’s advance knowledge of the new position, see supra note 2; and raised the bog-gart of possible age discrimination. Mes-nick’s criticism of Georgiou continued in a series of memoranda to, and conversations with, Capodici, and in sundry communications with subordinates. Among other things, he produced and presented for Ca-podici’s edification a slide show belittling Georgiou’s performance and capabilities. He also circulated notes to fellow employees exploring the idea of jumping ship and joining a rival company.
Mesnick never applied for the position as manager of the Department. On December 14, 1987, after a national search, GE named Steve Tubbs, age forty-two, to the vacancy. Mesnick was assigned to a different office and given the title of “manager, special projects.” His salary and benefits were unscathed, but his new post was under Tubbs and lacked supervisory power over other employees. Left as an emperor without an empire, Mesnick fired off a letter to Capodici explicitly criticizing Geor-giou’s integrity, professional honesty, and competence.
From that point forward, the situation plunged downhill. On one occasion, upset with Capodici, Mesnick boldly directed profanity at him. On another occasion, Mes-nick received a warning from Georgiou in respect to attendance problems. On January 21, 1988, Mesnick filed charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) alleging that GE violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1988), and its Massachusetts analogue, Mass.Gen.L. ch. 151B (1990), by failing to promote him and, instead, hiring Tubbs. GE learned of the charges on January 26, 1988.
That February, Mesnick and his superiors tangled regarding a self-evaluation form that GE asked Mesnick to complete. He adamantly refused, claiming that he was under no obligation to fill out the form. Over the next four months, a bad situation grew steadily worse. 3 Mesnick sent a flurry of memoranda to his superiors roasting Tubbs and Georgiou. These communiques culminated in a missive to Capodici, dated June 22, which requested a formal performance evaluation, excoriated Georgiou’s “professional ignorance,” and denigrated Tubbs’ professional stature. On July 18, 1988, Capodici informed Mes-nick that he considered the missive tantamount to “gross insubordination,” warned him that his “insubordinate behavior” was “totally unacceptable,” and stated that any recurrence would constitute “cause for immediate dismissal.”
On the same day, despite his enduring failure to complete the self-evaluation form, Mesnick received a performance evaluation from Tubbs. Tubbs rated Mesnick’s overall performance “marginally acceptable.” While acknowledging Mesnick’s “extensive contractual technical experience,” Tubbs stated that these talents were “negated by his lack of interpersonal skills/eonfrontational attitude, contentiousness, disregard for management direction and policy, and inability/unwillingness to fulfill managerial grade expectations.” Mesnick received no merit increase for 1988. Moreover, he was relocated to a smaller office, away from the Department.
Undaunted, Mesnick responded by filing a 20.10 concern in which he branded Tubbs’ handling of Mesnick’s unauthorized absences as derelict and suggested that Tubbs be fired. After an investigation, Tubbs was exonerated. On September 7, 1988, Mes-nick circulated yet another billet-doux. In it he renewed his attack on Tubbs, attempt *822 ed to rebut the recent (unfavorable) performance evaluation, and alleged that his superiors were retaliating against him because he had preferred discrimination charges. Nine days later, the ax fell: GE terminated Mesnick’s troubled tenure on grounds of insubordination and failure to work harmoniously with others. The plaintiff promptly filed another complaint with the EEOC. After the EEOC determined that both complaints were meritless, this suit was instituted.
II. THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
In civil procedure, summary judgment’s role is “to pierce the pleadings and to assess the proof in order to see whether there is a genuine need for trial.”
Garside v. Oseo Drug, Inc.,
The Rule 56 pavane has a distinctive set of steps. When requesting summary judgment, the moving party “must put the ball in play, averring ‘an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party’s case.’ ”
Garside,
[4] Over time, summary judgment has proven its usefulness as a means of avoiding full-dress trials in unwinnable cases, thereby freeing courts to utilize scarce judicial resources in more beneficial ways. Hence, while courts should apply the controlling standards carefully in all cases— and especially in cases that present difficult issues of proof—summary judgment can be appropriately entered even where elusive concepts such as motive or intent are involved.
See, e.g., Medina-Munoz,
III. THE DISCRIMINATION CLAIM
We consider, first, the claim of discrimination. Although the plaintiff tries to bal-kanize this claim into several segments—he contends,
inter alia,
that GE violated the ADEA by evaluating his work performance in an unfairly negative fashion, cutting his slated salary increase, impeding his ability to apply for the position of contracts manager, hiring a younger person for that posi
*823
tion, failing to promote him, demoting him, and terminating him — and the district court analyzed it in that fragmented fashion,
see Mesnick v. General Elec. Co.,
A.
The plaintiff in an ADEA discrimination suit bears the ultimate “burden of proving that his years were the determinative factor in his discharge, that is, that he would not have been fired but for his age.”
Freeman v. Package Machinery Co.,
The framework is by now a familiar one. The plaintiff must initially make a prima facie showing of discrimination.
McDonnell Douglas,
The next burden — articulating a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment decision — belongs to the defendant.
See Hebert,
At the final stage, the plaintiff is required to show, unassisted by the original inference of discrimination, that the employer’s proffered reason is actually a pretext for discrimination of the type alleged.
5
See Furnco Constr. Corp. v. Wa
*824
ters,
Because the resultant burden can be carried without direct proof of discrimination, requiring the plaintiff to show that the employer’s reason is a pretext for age discrimination comports with the principle that a plaintiff should not be required to produce “smoking-gun” evidence before prevailing in a discrimination suit. There are many veins of circumstantial evidence that may be mined by a plaintiff to this end. These include, but are by no means limited to, statistical evidence showing disparate treatment by the employer of members of the protected class,
see, e.g., Olivera v. Nestle Puerto Rico, Inc.,
It is important to remain mindful that, when the summary judgment record is complete, the jurisprudence of Rule 56 takes hold and the
McDonnell Douglas
burden-shifting framework must comport with the rule.
See MacDonald v. Eastern Wyo. Mental Health Ctr.,
It is settled that the presumption arising from a discrimination plaintiff’s prima facie
*825
case vanishes once the employer has articulated a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for dismissing the employee.
See Medina-Munoz,
Put another way, under conventional summary judgment practice, a plaintiff must establish at least a genuine issue of material fact on every element essential to his case in chief.
Celotex,
It is against this backdrop that we move to the particulars of Mesnick’s discrimination claim. We realize, as we do so, that the quantum of evidence a plaintiff must produce to survive a directed verdict at trial, and thus, the quantum necessary to survive a pretrial Rule 56 motion, is not susceptible to formulaic quantification. The determination must be made case by case, in light of the principles undergirding summary judgment, the evidentiary record, and the substantive rules of law applicable in a given instance.
B.
The district court ruled that there was no significantly probative evidence that GE’s stated reason for its actions— Mesnick’s insubordination and inimicality— masked a discriminatory animus based on Mesnick’s age.
7
The plaintiff concedes that this reason, if authentic, would legitimize an adverse employment decision. But, he claims to have adduced proof of both pretext and discriminatory animus, thereby sidestepping summary judgment. We agree in part, for Mesnick created a triable issue of fact anent pretext
vel non.
We disagree, however, as to the second half of the equation. Like the court below, we are unable to find in this record enough evidence of age discrimination to withstand
brevis
disposition. That ends the matter. The “ADEA does not stop a company from discharging an employee for any reason (fair or unfair) or for no reason, so long as the decision to fire does not stem from the person’s age.”
Freeman,
To be sure, Mesnick flooded the nisi prius roll with plethoric evidence designed to illustrate his professional compe *826 tence and ability to work well with others— but the vast majority of Mesnick’s evidence related to pretext vel non. Regardless of its bulk, this evidence had nothing at all to do with age or with the employer’s true motives. On that score, Mesnick offered only two isolated tidbits purporting to indicate GE’s discriminatory animus. Viewed singly or in combination, these fragments would not allow a rational jury to find that GE had a hidden, age-oriented agenda.
The first piece of evidence comprises a comment attributed to Georgiou, on the occasion of Sherman’s departure, that he was “sad to lose the youth of the work force.” Words of praise for youth—Sherman was in his thirties—do not, by themselves, indicate a bias against more mature workers.
8
See, e.g., Shager v. Upjohn Co.,
The second piece of evidence upon which Mesnick fastens is no more rugged. He points to the fact that, when an outside search firm retained by GE reported on potential recruits for the manager’s position, it not only furnished the company a roster of candidates, but also listed their ages.
9
Yet, despite ample time for discovery, Mesnick offered no evidence that GE directed the search firm to memorialize applicants’ ages or that the company had reason to suspect that the search firm’s report, when submitted, would contain such data. Whatever the search firm’s reason for collecting ages, the intentions of a third party may not be attributed to an employer without some rational basis for attribution.
See La Montagne v. American Convenience Prods., Inc.,
To sum up, the district court was under no obligation to draw unreasonably speculative inferences in mulling whether the plaintiff fulfilled his burden of adducing “specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.”
Anderson,
*827 IV. THE RETALIATION CLAIM
Our journey through the record is still incomplete. In addition to claiming that GE discriminated against him by reason of his age, the plaintiff also alleged that GE retaliated against him because he dared to exercise ADEA-related rights. We turn, then, to the question of whether Mesnick presented sufficient evidence to evade summary judgment on his retaliation claim. 10
A.
The ADEA provides in pertinent part:
It shall be unlawful for an employer to discriminate against any of his employees or applicants for employment ... because such individual ... has opposed any practice made unlawful by this section, or because such individual ... has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or litigation under this chapter.
29 U.S.C. § 623(d). Absent direct evidence, the
McDonnell Douglas
burden-shifting framework remains the option of choice in retaliation cases, albeit with slight modifications. Under the applicable model, the plaintiff must make a prima facie showing that (i) he engaged in ADEA-protected conduct, (ii) he was thereafter subjected to an adverse employment action, and (iii) a causal connection existed between the protected conduct and the adverse action.
See Connell v. Bank of Boston,
Once a prima facie case is delineated, the burden shifts to the defendant to articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its employment decision.
See McNairn v. Sullivan,
*828
There are many sources of circumstantial evidence that, theoretically, can demonstrate retaliation in a way sufficient to leap the summary judgment or directed verdict hurdles. These include, but are not limited to, evidence of differential treatment in the workplace,
see, e.g., Sumner v. United States Postal Serv.,
B.
If we assume, arguendo, that the plaintiff established a prima facie case of retaliation, then, given the defendant’s forceful articulation of a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason justifying its actions, see supra Part III(B), the case boils down to what we have termed the ultimate question: did Mesnick present sufficient evidence that GE’s stated reason was a pretext for retaliation? We think the answer to this query is in the negative.
Here, the very chronology of the case militates against a finding that Mesnick’s evidence was sufficiently robust to thwart
brevis
disposition. His first complaint of age discrimination was made informally in a memorandum he sent to Capodici on April 23, 1987. Almost nine months later, he filed charges with the EEOC. Not only is this a long gestation period, during which Mesnick’s employment remained substantially intact, but GE also offered evidence of insubordination and inimicality that antedated either of these events. Moreover, after Mesnick first enlisted the EEOC, he remained in GE’s employ for another nine months, more or less, before he was finally fired (and then, only after committing a particularly provocative act in outright defiance of an unmistakably aposematic admonition). We think the sequence of events in this case suggests the absence of a causal connection between the statutorily protected conduct and the adverse employment action, not the converse.
Cf., e.g., Oliver v. Digital Equipment Corp.,
In addition to this lack of temporal coincidence, we can find no other competent evidence of retaliation. Mesnick’s proof related exclusively to whether business decisions made by the company in its efforts to deal with an employee it perceived as insubordinate were, or were not, plausible. He tendered nothing, direct or circumstantial, suggesting a retaliatory animus. To the contrary, the record, read as a whole, is more consistent with an employer’s longstanding desire to improve an employee’s behavior than with some sort of vengeful preoccupation. We can, after all, safely conclude, on the basis of undisputed facts, that GE for many months endured conduct on Mesnick’s part which was much more antagonistic and disruptive than his eventual resort to the EEOC.
To be sure, GE knew, at the time Mesnick was dismissed, that he was pursuing an age discrimination claim. But, that kind of knowledge on an employer’s part, without more, cannot itself be sufficient to take a retaliation case to the jury. Were the rule otherwise, then a disgruntled employee, no matter how poor his performance or how contemptuous his attitude toward his supervisors, could effectively inhibit a well-deserved discharge by merely filing, or threatening to file, a discrimination complaint. We agree with the Eighth Circuit that, while statutes such as the ADEA bar retaliation for exercising rights guaranteed by law, they do “not clothe the complainant with immunity for past and
*829
present inadequacies, unsatisfactory performance, and uncivil conduct in dealing with subordinates and with his peers.”
Jackson v. St. Joseph State Hosp.,
Because we do not believe a reasonable jury could find in the plaintiff’s favor on the issue of retaliatory animus, summary judgment was proper.
Y. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. The plaintiff’s failure to adduce evidence supporting an inference of discriminatory or retaliatory motive was, as the district court perspicaciously discerned, fatal to his case in its several permutations. 11 The defendant’s motion for summary judgment was, therefore, appropriately granted.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Mesnick challenged the fairness of both the unflattering characterizations of his prior service and Georgiou’s resultant evaluation. He did not dispute, however, that Pressman, Stockton, and Kupec, Mesnick’s bosses during his RCA days, informed Georgiou about a panoply of Mesnick-related problems. Indeed, RCA’s management had informed Mesnick himself about certain complaints no later than the winter of 1985-1986.
. Mesnick first learned of the new position from one of his subordinates, Mark Sherman, who resigned from GE to seek greener pastures. During his exit interview, Sherman was apprised of the realignment by Georgiou and thereafter mentioned it to Mesnick.
. Among other things, Mesnick's attendance problems persisted. On March 28, 1988, Tubbs registered a "20.10 concern" because Mesnick had been absent without noting the absence on his time card. Under internal GE policies, a 20.10 concern is a vehicle for submitting reports anent questionable practices by fellow employees.
. Without belaboring the point, we note that the plaintiffs other claims of discrimination, to the extent cognizable at all, have been convincingly dispatched in the district court’s memorandum of decision. Because the plaintiff did not make out a prima facie case on most (if not all) of those claims, and because the evidentiary hole that sinks the claim of discriminatory discharge, see infra Part III(B), is equally fatal to the other claims if reviewed piecemeal, we perceive no point in pursuing an endless series of separate analyses. There is, however, one exception: in Part IV, infra, we examine independently the claim that GE violated the ADEA not by age discrimination, but by retaliating against Mes-nick when he complained of such discrimination.
. Some opinions have linked a plaintiffs burden of demonstrating pretext to the strength of the employer’s proffered reason.
See, e.g., Loeb,
. Although, in this posture, the burden-shifting framework itself becomes inconsequential, the court must still examine the evidence that the parties adduced in proceeding under the framework.
. The district court also questioned whether Mesnick had made out a prima facie case on the discriminatory discharge claim. We assume, for argument’s sake, that the plaintiff successfully overcame this obstacle.
.
The converse, of course, has different ramifications. There are many situations where a superior's slur about persons over forty may well signal a discriminatory motive underlying an employer’s decisions.
See, e.g., Olivera,
. We note in passing that, under applicable EEOC guidelines, a request for an applicant’s age “is not, in itself, a violation of the [ADEA].’’ 29 C.F.R. § 1625.5 (1990).
. The plaintiff asserts nearly two years’ worth of grievances as predicates for his retaliation claim. He contends that GE manifested its retaliatory animus by not deputizing him to attend an out-of-town professional conclave, not inviting him to certain staff meetings, refusing to give him information concerning the company’s policy on posting job openings, failing to afford him prompt access to documents pertaining to an investigation of pricing practices, delaying his performance evaluation, telling his fellow employees not to discuss work-related matters with him, denying him a salary increase, moving his office, filing a 20.10 concern, terminating him, and, as a final indignity, using false representations to gain possession of documents in his office. Despite this asseverational array, we think the retaliation claim can best be taken as a whole to determine its viability. In all its permutations, the claim falters because of Mesnick’s failure to carry his burden of adducing evidence adequate to create a triable issue on GE’s retaliatory animus. See text infra.
. As framed, the plaintiffs complaint contained parallel claims under federal law and the Massachusetts antidiscrimination statute, Mass. Gen.L. ch. 151B, § 4. In opposing summary judgment, however, the plaintiff relied exclusively on federal precedents. The district court granted summary judgment on all claims, reasoning that, insofar as the state-law counts were concerned, Massachusetts would employ a standard similar to that embodied in the ADEA. In his reply brief on appeal, the plaintiff for the first time attempts to argue that Massachusetts law is more favorably disposed to his claims. We do not consider the legal merits of this argument because we find the point to have been waived.
See Sandstrom v. Chemlawn Corp.,
