Abu Ahmad Al-Hakim: He is not considered strong by them.
Abu Ahmad bin Adi Al-Jurjani: He has strange hadiths from Shu'ba and other Basrans, and he is among those whose hadiths are written down.
Abu Hatim Al-Razi: He is not strong, his hadiths are written down but not used as evidence.
Abu Hatim bin Hibban Al-Busti: He is a rejector of Hadith, among those who narrate reversed narrations from the reliable narrators and brings from the trustworthy narrators what does not resemble their hadiths. It is not permissible to use him as evidence.
Abu Dawud Al-Sijistani: Acceptable, and once said: They abandoned his hadith.
Ahmad bin Hanbal: People discarded his hadith, and once said: He is alright, and once said: How bad is the opinion of the Basrans about him. Abu Hafs Umar bin Shaheen said: This statement from Ahmad bin Hanbal about Abu Bahr is harsh, and if a person's hadith is discarded, it is worse than being weak and confused, and it is not discarded.
Ahmad bin Shu'aib Al-Nasai: Weak Basran.
Ahmad bin Salih Al-Jili: He considered him trustworthy.
Ibn Hajar Al-Asqalani: Weak.
Al-Dhahabi: A group weakened him.
Ali bin Al-Madini: His hadith is abandoned, and once said: I do not narrate anything from him.
Muhammad bin Ismail Al-Bukhari: He did not intend to discard him.
Authors of Tahrir Taqrib Al-Tahdhib: Weak but considered.
Yahya bin Sa'id Al-Qattan: He had a good opinion of him.
Yahya bin Ma'in: Weak in Hadith.