If I would find myself in this kind of situation, I would JAM the 360$ and take the pot (208$) or get called. There is nothing wrong with winning smallish when there are lots of bad cards in the deck and basically no accurate info where you are at in a multi-way pot. However, no point to slow-play here and folding is out of the question. If you get called by a bigger set or 45, then just reload or go home. That's poker
Your read on OMC was that he's not afraid of calling big bets with non-nutted hands. The way the veteran is betting, might mean a hand like AA, TT, AK or AT (AA/TT would of course crush you but those are also the most unlikely cases). This means you might very well get him to the middle with very unfavorable holdings that you have witnessed before.
SB could be there with Ax too, but the board is very draw-heavy, so the range is larger. Hands like 45s, 35s, QJs, KTs etc. are probable holdings for him. He might also have the same read on the opener and wants to keep the pot as small as possible before making his hand. Your shove would put him to a test with his draws and that is what you want to do here.
Anyway, you want to get value from Ax hands and give the drawing hands bad odds to continue, but there are not many reasonable ways to do all that. Raising small (130-200$) is like making it pre-flop 22$
and anything less than your shove, means that you don't have enough to bet on the river. With bigger stacks and/or when facing total idiots I might consider something else.
Calling is a big nono if you don't plan to check-fold when the case-deuce doesn't hit on the river
...I just can't find a reason to call here.
OT: I would prefer check-raise on the flop to 65$ or even bigger, lead the turn and build the pot straight away. Your villains might also put you on draws and the hand is still very well disguised so there are enough reasons for aggression. Your image and the table's history are in a key role as well, but with the information given or when in a new table, I would choose more aggressive approach.
Donk-bet on the flop could work only against a very aggressive player who is most likely to raise you on the flop. Donking would also need smaller stacks or a bigger pot to get everything to the middle straight away.
Only in heads-up situation, depending on who I'm facing, maybe AA would be worth to slow-play, but never when in a multi-way pot on boards like these.
Last edited by Castaway80; 07-15-2019 at 12:43 PM.