Abu Ahmad Al-Hakim: Abandoned in Hadith
Abu Ahmad Ibn Adi Al-Jurjani: We hope that there is no problem with him, as reported by the trustworthy narrators from Basra, Kufa, and others
Abu Bakr Al-Barqani: Weak
Abu Bakr Al-Bayhaqi: He is not relied upon, and he said in Al-Asma' Wa Al-Sifat: Abandoned
Abu Hatim Al-Razi: He narrates many Hadiths from Anas that need consideration, and there is weakness in his Hadiths
Abu Hatim Ibn Hibban Al-Busti: It is not permissible to narrate from him except for the purpose of astonishment
Abu Dawud Al-Sijistani: A righteous man
Abu Isa Al-Tirmidhi: He is weak in Hadith
Ahmad Ibn Hanbal: He narrates fabricated Hadiths, and once: He is weak
Ahmad Ibn Shuayb Al-Nasa'i: Abandoned in Hadith, and he said once: Weak
Ibn Hajar Al-Asqalani: Weak, Ascetic, and once: Very poor memory, many mistakes, and he did not preserve the chain of narration, so he would attach to Anas everything he heard from others
Al-Daraqutni: Weak
Al-Dhahabi: Weak
Zakaria Ibn Yahya Al-Saji: He makes mistakes and does not memorize, but his Hadiths are accepted due to his truthfulness and righteousness
Shubah Ibn Al-Hajjaj: I would rather be a highway robber than narrate from him, and he once said: I would rather commit adultery than narrate from him
Ali Ibn Al-Madini: He was weak
Amr Ibn Ali Al-Fallas: He is not strong in Hadith
Muhammad Ibn Sa'd, the scribe of Al-Waqidi: Weak and a believer in free will
Yahya Ibn Ma'in: Weak, and he said once: A righteous man but his Hadiths are insignificant, and he said once: A truthful man. In the narration of Ibn Mahriz, he said: He is insignificant, he is weak
Yaqub Ibn Sufyan Al-Faswi: There is weakness in him