Yep, they were waiting for the album, and many ended up let down. When the unit was in their prime, that Free Yayo movement had everyone likePeople was anticipating for a Yayo album after 50 put out GROTD. He had some good verses here and there.

Yep, they were waiting for the album, and many ended up let down. When the unit was in their prime, that Free Yayo movement had everyone likePeople was anticipating for a Yayo album after 50 put out GROTD. He had some good verses here and there.
Song called "Curious" with Young Buck in the video
How appropriate![]()
All factsWhen they first started Yayo was spitting but after that jail stint he was whack
he album had some joints on it though
live by the gun was hard plus dude had some of the hardest mixtape covers I’ve ever seen lol
All factsAfter jail he just wasn't spitting consistently and fell into the hype man role.
This dude was garbage
I think its click click off blood money by mobb deeppost please lol
This dude was garbage
DMX a fool for this one
That substance had DMX questioning who was Obama .. "Barack??!!"
Basically called Yayo the U-God of G-Unit.
I'm not a super fan of Yayo, but now I want to listen to his catalog, because he does have his own tracks, lots of features and G-Unit verses.
But just like U-God he added his on distinctive flow and lyrics to the group. So to answer the question, G-Unit was better to have Tony Yayo than not have him. Every member doesn't have to be amazing, sometimes you need one member just to provide a slightly off center vibe from the rest of the group to keep things interesting.
Beg for Mercy is classic and he played a great role in that.
Of course Lloyd Banks was better lyricist, but Tony Yayo played his position well.
Like with this track..he provided the aggressive background hype that made the track go even harder...visual and audio-wise