Affirmed by published opinion. Senior Judge BOWMAN wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINS and Judge NIEMEYER joined.
OPINION
In this failure-to-hire retaliation case, we must consider whether the selecting official’s inconsistent statements are enough to satisfy the plaintiffs burden of proof as to the elements of his prima facie case and as to pretext. The District Court determined that these inconsistencies did not provide sufficient evidence of pretext and granted summary judgment to the defendant. William Price, the plaintiff, appeals. We affirm.
This case stems from Price’s unsuccessful attempts to gain employment at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In 1995, Price applied for a job as a Medical Equipment Repairer. Price was one of four candidates classified as highly qualified after an initial round of screening, and he was subsequently interviewed in early May by the selecting official, Johnny Robbins. Ultimately, Robbins selected two of the highly qualified applicants but not Price. In late August of 1995, after Robbins made his selections, Price ran into Robbins on the NIH campus and they had a brief, friendly conversation about what Price might do to be a more attractive candidate. In response to Price’s questions, Robbins did offer some suggestions and, over the next several months, Price followed through on some of those suggestions. In January of 1996, Price learned thаt one of the individuals that Robbins hired had, in Price’s estimation, inferior credentials. To confirm that this individual was in fact the one who was hired, Price phoned him at NIH, ostensibly to congratulate him on getting the job and to ask after any future openings at NIH. This individual later informed Robbins about the call. On January 22, 1996, three days after his phone call, Price filed an EEO complaint alleging that he had been dis *212 criminated against in the hiring process. During the investigation, the EEO counselor spoke with Robbins about the complaint twice, but for only approximately one minute each time. It was during one of these brief conversations that Robbins related to the EEO counselor the fact of Price’s phone call to one of the successful candidates. Eventually, the EEO counsel- or filed a report concluding there had been no discrimination.
In July of 1996, Price applied for a Biomedical Engineering Tеchnician position at NIH, for which Robbins was also the selecting official. Price was again included on the list of highly qualified applicants, was again interviewed (in October), but was again not selected. Thereafter, Price filed another EEO complaint that raised several charges of discrimination as well as a charge of retaliation based on his prior EEO complaint. Price dropped his discrimination claims and his retaliаtion charge was heard by an EEOC administrative law judge who, after a full hearing, ruled there had been no retaliation for Price’s prior protected activity. Price then filed this suit in federal court alleging that Robbins violated 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3 (2000) when he retaliated against Price by refusing to select him on account of his prior EEO complaint. The District Court concluded that Price could not prove his prima facie case because Price wаs unable to demonstrate that Robbins knew Price had filed the EEO complaint and, even assuming the existence of a prima facie case, because Price was unable to show Robbins’s reasons for not selecting him were pretextual. We review the District Court’s summary judgment decision de novo, reading the record in the light most favorable to Price, the non-moving party.
Dugan v. Albemarle County Sch. Bd.,
A plaintiff lacking direct evidence of retaliation may utilize the
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
To establish his prima facie case of retaliation, Price must show that he engaged in protected activity, that Robbins took adverse action against him, and that a causal relationship existed between the protected activity and the adverse employment activity.
King v. Rumsfeld,
Knowledge alone, however, does not establish a causal connection between Price’s protected activity and Robbins’s decision not to hire him. Previously, this Court has held that a causal connection for purposes of demonstrating a prima facie case exists where the employer takes adverse employment action against an employee shortly after learning of the protected activity.
Cerberonics, Inc.,
Price urges that the District Court erred when it concluded that he was unable to show that Robbins’s explanations for refusing to hire him were pretextual. Specifically, he contends that he has rebutted the legitimate non-retaliatory explanations that were offered by showing inconsistencies in Robbins’s testimony and by eliciting admissions regarding these explanations. Thus, he claims that under
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc.,
In
Reeves
and its predecessor,
St. Mary’s Honor Center v. Hicks,
Whether judgment as a matter of law is appropriate in any particular case will depend on a number of factors. Those include the strength of the plaintiffs prima facie case, the probative value of the proof that the employer’s explanation is false, and any other evidence that supports the employer’s case and that properly may be considered on a motion for judgment as a matter of law.
Id.
at 148-49,
As a matter of fact, when this Court has applied the
Reeves
methodology to sustain a verdict or to allow a plaintiff to survive summary judgment, it appears to hаve done so only in cases where the plaintiff had a substantially stronger case than Price has in the case at bar.
Compare Dennis,
presented uncontroverted evidencе of a strong prima facie case — despite his repeated applications, his superb qualifications, and his expressed willingness to accept any available position, Sears refused to hire him ... and instead hired a Caucasian woman who, Sears itself concedes, was less qualified than [the plaintiff].
Id. at 852. Moreover, the Court concluded, and the employer largely conceded, that the proffered non-discriminatory reasons were inconsistent over time, false, and in some instances based on mistakes of fact on the employer’s part. 1 In those *215 circumstances, the plaintiff was entitled to survive summary judgment. In short, the Court found a strong prima facie case and a strong showing of pretext. Id. at 857 (“[Tjhere is a clear prima facie case of employment discrimination, a good deal of evidence of pretext casting serious doubt оn the employer’s proffered justification for its job action, and nothing to prevent a rational fact-finder from finding that the employer was motivated by discriminatory reasons.”). The present case is demonstrably different.
Here, as we already have suggested, Price has not put forward a particularly strong prima facie case of retaliation. Fatal to his attempt to invoke Reeves is that his showing of pretext is equivocal at best. In his EEOC investigation affidavit, Robbins offered essentially four reasons for not hiring Price for the second position: that Price was less experienced (especially with laboratory equipment); that Price was not certified; that Price was not currently working in the field, had experienced a break in service, and might require extra training; and that Price wanted to redefine the position. Price asserts that he has demonstrated that these reasons were pretext for retaliation because the reasons are based on mistakes of fact or because Robbins has taken inconsistent positions regarding them. We disagree.
With respect to the candidates’ experience level, Price points out that Robbins later admitted that Price was “quite equal as far as experience” to the candidates who were hired. EEOC Admin. Tr. at 58 (Dec. 8, 1998). Consequently, he argues, Rоbbins’s earlier claim that he was not as experienced must have been pretext. We agree that a thorough review of Price’s application reveals a great deal of experience with laboratory and patient-care equipment. Still, it was Robbins’s testimony that this information struck him later, only after he “read the applications several times ... to make sure that there wasn’t something that I perhaps overlooked.” Id. at 60. This answer squares with our own review of Price’s application, which highlights his experience with patient-care equipment as opposed to purely laboratory equipment. For instance, the OF 612 form that Price filled out, which lists his last two jobs, speaks largely in terms of familiarity with medical equipment and mentions laboratory equipment almost as an afterthought: “[M]y primary responsibility was to test, calibrate, maintain, install, and repair biomedical instrumentation such as portable xray units, patient monitors, gas lasers, ultrasound imagers, blood gas analyzers, surgical devices, and laboratory equipment.” Joint App. at 150. Price’s other application materials also list and discuss his familiarity with medical equipment before discussing his familiarity with laboratory equipment. Similarly, although his performance ratings were outstanding, his supervisor discussed his work on medical, not laboratory, equipment. Id. at 152 (“Mr. Price demonstrated excellent performance in his knowledge and technical ability to affect [sic] repairs on medical equipment and systems. His skills were instrumental in keeping all major X-Ray Systems and medical equipment in Urology functioning.”). Nor is it the case, as it was in Sears Roebuck, that the candidates who were hired were demonstrably less qualified than Price. In these circumstances, we cannot say that Robbins’s reassessment of Price’s experience bespeaks pretext.
*216 As for Robbins’s claim thаt the hirees were certified and that Price was not, this appears to be incorrect and could be evidence of pretext. Still, this evidence does not hint greatly of pretext because Price has not adduced other substantial evidence of pretext or evidence of mendacity to support an inference that the incorrect reason was not merely the honest mistake that Robbins suggests explains his inconsistencies. See EEOC Tr. at 62. 2 More to the point, the only evidence in the record suggests that Robbins believed the two hirees were certified because they brought this fact to his attention. In contrast, Price apparently never highlighted to Robbins the fact that he was certified. 3 A reasonable trier of fact could easily conclude that Robbins was wrong about Price’s certification status but would be hard-pressed to conclude that this established рretext.
Price next argues that he can show pretext in Robbins’s claim that he (Price) would require extra training. Specifically, Price claims that Robbins’s explanation that the hirees were preferable because they were already working in the field (and would not require training) is false because when asked what extra training Price might require, Robbins stated that “I do not know [why this would be a problem].” Id. at 67. But Price can create this seeming incоnsistency only by tak *217 ing Robbins’s testimony out of context. We note that seven lines later, in response to the question, “[W]hat was the connection between the break in service and Mr. Price not being selected?”, Robbins explained that the connection was “the changes in technology. If there’s a break in service and whatnot. A lots [sic] of changes take place within two to three years.” Id.; see also id. at 61 (“Mr. Price had been out of the field for a few years and Mr. Gantt and Mr. Baron [were] currently working in that particular field, I think across the board, Mr. Price would require some additional training.”). We see no inconsistency in Robbins’s explanation and cannot conclude that a reasonable trier of fact could find this reason was pretextual.
With respect to Robbins’s claim that Price suggested he wanted to redefine the position, we see no evidence of pretext whatsоever. In his EEOC affidavit and in his testimony, Robbins consistently explained that because Price mentioned that “he could also see [the job] as someone acting as a liaison between me and the engineering staff and the administrative staff,” Robbins concluded that Price wanted to redefine the position. Id. at 65-66. As Robbins further explained, being a liaison “was not a requirement of that position description,” id. at 66, and reflected unfavorably on Price’s candidacy. 4 At most, Price earned an admission that this wаs a somewhat intangible factor and that Robbins was unsure precisely what weight it played in the hiring decision. Id. at 67. We conclude that a reasonable trier of fact could not find that Robbins’s cryptic concession about the weight that Price’s desire to redefine the position played in Robbins’s decision not to hire Price is evidence from which a reasonable trier of fact could find pretext.
At most, therefore, Price can demonstrate that Robbins was wrong about one reason (certification) and was misled by Price’s own application as to Price’s level of experience. As for the other two nondiscriminatory reasons (Price’s need for extra training and that Price wanted to redefine the position), the plaintiff has not shown pretext. In these circumstances, there is insufficient probative evidence of pretext to permit a court tо send this case to the jury under
Reeves.
While “it is
permissible
for the trier of fact to infer the ultimate fact of [retaliation] from the falsity of the employer’s explanation,”
Reeves,
*218 For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. We note that mere mistakes of fact are not evidence of unlawful discrimination.
See,
*215
e.g., Jordan v. Summers,
. Robbins’s testimony at the EEOC hearing includes the following:
Q: [Plaintiff’s Counsel] And why is your testimony different today?
A: [Robbins] I don’t think it’s different. I just think that I’m just in a position sometimes to supply some additional information.
Q: So you couldn’t have supplied that information to me at the time? Is that right? At the deposition?
A: I was very nervous at the time and I still am today.
EEOC Tr. at 62. Robbins explainеd other of the inconsistencies saying:
Okay. This is my first time dealing with an EEO complaint and sometimes when you’re dealing with something for the first time, some of the things you do forget. Sometimes if you’re asked the same question several months later or a year later you will remember different things. And this is what happened in this particular situation here is that there was [sic] quite a few questions during that first deposition that I just could not remember what took place on that particular day in your office. Id. at 58.
. A: [Robbins] I do recall Mr. Gantt was saying that he had been a biomedical engineering technician for maybe six or eight months and ... Mr. Baron, he had proof of his certification with his application.
Q: [Plaintiff’s Counsel] I’m sorry. You said Mr. Gantt had what as far as certification?
A: He had — I believe he said he had been working as a biomedical engineering technician for I guess at that time from six to eight months.
% * * *
Q: What organization or оrganizations certifies biomedical engineering techs?
A: I do not know.
Q: So why did you use the term certified on your affidavit?
A: It was a requirement from my supervisor at the time.
Q: Your supervisor said you had to sign an affidavit that said something about certification?
A: No. The requirement was in the PD [position description?]. And so when I wrote the affidavit, I put that in there.
Q: You put in there that Mr. Gantt had certification; yes? Yes or no?
A: And Mr. Baron, I believe.
Q: But in fact, you don’t know if Mr. Gantt is certified at all. Is that right?
A: Only what he told me, that he had been working as a biomedical engineering technician for six to eight months.
Q: How long had Mr. Price been working as a biomedical engineer at that time?
A: As I recall, I’m thinking maybe seven or eight years.
Q: Was Mr. Price certified?
A: Yes.
EEOC Tr. at 62-64.
. Q: [Plaintiff’s Counsel] Did you consider Mr. Price's remark to you in that regard about being a liaison as unfavorably reflecting on his candidacy?
A: [Robbins] Well, yes, if he wants to — if he’s trying in some way to redefine what that particular position was all about or is all about.
Id. at 66.
. We pause here to emphasize that although
Reeves
will allow a plaintiff to survive summary judgment without presenting independent evidence of discrimination (or retaliation), it will pеrmit this only where the other evidence of discrimination is sufficiently strong to ensure that the employer is held liable for unlawful discrimination and not merely for inconsistent statements that arise from reading applications hastily or from being nervous during depositions. This is a crucial point because our laws impose liability only when “the employer's action was the product of unlawful discrimination” and do not impose liability simply because "the employer’s explanation of its action was not believable.”
Hicks,
