Abu Ahmad al-Hakim: He is not strong according to them
Abu Ahmad ibn Adi al-Jurjani: He is from the Shia of Kufa, and despite his weakness, his hadith is written
Abu Bakr al-Bayhaqi: Not strong, and once: It was narrated from al-Awza'i that he said: Yazid is a man of weak hadith and his hadith contradicts the Sunnah
Abu Hatim al-Razi: He is not strong
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: He was truthful, but when he grew old, his memory deteriorated and he changed, so he would be taught what was taught to him, so mistakes occurred in his hadith from others teaching him and his answering what was not from his hadith due to his poor memory. So, whoever heard from him before he entered Kufa in his early life, heard correctly, and whoever heard from him after he arrived in Kufa after his memory changed and he was taught what
Abu Dawud al-Sijistani: I do not know of anyone who abandoned his hadith, and I prefer others over him
Abu Zur'a al-Razi: Lenient, his hadith is written but not used as evidence
Abu Isa al-Tirmidhi: Narrated from al-Bukhari, that he said: Truthful but he makes mistakes
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: He was not a hafiz, and once: His hadith is not like that
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: He is not strong
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Jili: Permissible hadith, and he was taught at the end of his life
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Masri: Trustworthy and I do not like the saying of those who criticized him
Ahmad ibn Harun al-Bardiji: He is not strong
Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub al-Jawzajani: I heard them weakening his hadith
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Weak, he grew old and changed, and he began to be taught, and he once said: He is disputed and the majority are on weakening his hadith
Al-Daraqutni: Weak, he makes many mistakes, and he is taught when he is taught, and he had become confused
Al-Dhahabi: Truthful, but he is a Shia scholar with a poor memory, he is not abandoned
Hammad ibn Usama al-Kufi: If he swore to me fifty days in a row, I would not believe him
Shuba ibn al-Hajjaj: He was a Rafidi
Abd al-Baqi ibn Qani' al-Baghdadi: Weak
Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn Khuzayma: There is something in the heart about him
Muhammad ibn Sa'd, the scribe of al-Waqidi: Trustworthy in himself, but he became confused at the end of his life and came with strange things
Muhammad ibn Abdullah al-Makhrami: Throw him away, honor him
Muhammad ibn Fadil al-Dabbi: One of the great Shia Imams
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj al-Nishapuri: He mentioned him among those who are covered by concealment and truthfulness
Wakee' ibn al-Jarrah: He is nothing
Yahya ibn Ma'in: His hadith is not used as evidence, and once: He is not strong, and once: He is a weak narrator, and once: He weakens, and once: He is not like that
Ya'qub ibn Sufyan al-Faswi: If they were criticizing him for his change, then he is just and trustworthy