Abu Bakr al-Bayhaqi: Trustworthy
Abu Ja'far al-Nahaas: He narrates on the authority of those he met (mursal hadith), his narration is not considered evidence unless he says 'He narrated to us' or similar.
Abu Hatim al-Razi: Trustworthy, and once: He is similar to Zuhri in the abundance of narration and vast knowledge of men, and he has a better memory than Abu Ishaq al-Shaybani, and once at the end of his life he became confused, and once: He grew old and his memory worsened
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: He narrated on the authority of those he met (mursal hadith)
Abu Dawud al-Sijistani: He narrated from a hundred sheikhs whom no one else narrated from
Abu Amr ibn al-Salah: He became confused
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: Trustworthy, righteous, but these are the ones who narrated from him at the end of his life
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: Trustworthy
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Jili: Trustworthy
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Trustworthy, Abundant Narrator, Worshipper, he became confused at the end of his life, and once: One of the leading and reliable scholars before he became confused, and I did not see in Bukhari's narration from him except from the early companions like Thawri and Shu'ba, not from the later ones like Ibn Uyainah and others, and he was relied upon by the group.
Al-Dhahabi: One of the leading scholars, and once: One of the Imams of the Tabi'een and the most reliable of them, except that he grew old and forgot and did not become confused
Sibṭ ibn al-'Ajami: Great Tabi'i
Sufyan ibn Uyainah: The narration of Abu Ishaq, as long as it is not known that he narrated it on the authority of those he met, is considered evidence, and he is inclined to Shi'ism
Shu'ba ibn al-Hajjaj: He is a better narrator than Mujahid, al-Hasan, and Ibn Sirin
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Trustworthy