Your preflop raiser has something like AK or AQ, and the other guy might have a
draw.
Your read here has to be that your opponents are not drawing to a better
full house. That's because the
flop came out 6 high. If someone had the 6 here they would
raise or
fold on the
flop. If someone had 56 they would
raise real hard.
The only thing you have to be worried about is a high
pocket pair spiking a
set. Neither of these guys have that. The guy with a high
pocket pair would
re-raise your $5. You
overbet the
flop like you hit the 6
rag and
don't want overs chasing. That's why I
don't put either of them on that high
pocket pair. Your never going to buy this pot if someone has a high
pocket pair. Your going to get called
all-in. Trust me, they
don't have it. The board is too scary to
smooth call $5 with a high
pocket pair.
Given all of that, this is NOT a good time to slowplay by checking. It has nothing to do with you getting drawn out either. It has to do with the high likelyhood that one of these opponents will
call an additional bet. This is a good time to
act weak and bet just $5 again.
Don't
buy the pot. Just bet enough where they want to see that
river.
This is a perfect example of where you take advantage of pot committment. Your two opponents are leveraging themselves against each other by calling $5. They have committed each other, and will stay in for additional like bets. You should bet $5 again. It look like YOU are drawing now, and at least one of them will
call or even go
over the top sensing weakness.
$5 is the correct
turn bet in this situation.