Craze at his best was hard to beat. I think his was one of the last of true analog routines before DVS and scratch nerd culture really took over. Craze also had this genuine style to him in his music, posture, and record control. I think many DJs of his time felt the need to front and put on a hard persona (both in person and in their music) but Craze just sorta went up there as himself and disses were always well placed.
As far as the routine goes, it does seem outdated now but has some clever music bits, light (but dynamic) scratching as well as some trickery (fake scratching with his back). With DVS you sort of expect the trick front and center and would be disappointed if there wasn't any in a set. It takes way more effort to create a trick on vinyl records. I think this routine would win even today but so far nobody has been able to really emulate Craze.