Abu Ahmad ibn Adi al-Jurjani: Trustworthy narrators narrated from him, and he narrated from Sa'id ibn Jubayr, Ibn al-Hanafiyyah, and Abu Abd al-Rahman al-Salami things that are not corroborated.
Abu Bakr al-Bayhaqi: Weak, and he once said: The companions of Sahih did not consider him.
Abu Hatim al-Razi: He is not strong.
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: He is among those who make mistakes and reverse narrations, and this is frequent due to the small number of his narrations, so it does not surprise me if he is relied upon when he narrates alone.
Abu Zur'a al-Razi: A weak narrator of hadith, he sometimes elevates the hadith and sometimes suspends it.
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: A weak narrator of hadith, and once: A rejected narrator of hadith from Sa'id ibn Jubayr, and once: Like the wind, he did not authenticate it.
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: He is not strong, but his hadith is written.
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani: Truthful, he makes mistakes.
Al-Husayn ibn Ali al-Karabisi: One of the weakest of people.
Al-Daraqutni: He is considered, and once: He is not strong according to them.
Al-Dhahabi: Lenient, and once: Lenient in hadith.
Zakariya ibn Yahya al-Saji: Truthful, he makes mistakes.
Sufyan al-Thawri: He weakened his hadiths from Ibn al-Hanafiyyah.
Abd al-Rahman ibn Mahdi: He abandoned him.
Muhammad ibn Sa'd, the author of al-Waqidi: Weak in hadith.
The authors of Tahrir Taqrib al-Tahdhib: Weak, no major scholar authenticated him.
Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Qattan: He knows and rejects, and he did not narrate from him.
Yahya ibn Ma'in: In the narration of Ibn Abi Maryam: Trustworthy, and in the narration of Ahmad ibn Zuhayr: Not trustworthy, and once: Not that strong.
Ya'qub ibn Sufyan al-Faswi: He weakens, and once: He is lenient in his hadith and he is trustworthy.