Typhoon Tracy is likely to stay at home and not seek overseas options despite chalking up her third Group One success in the CF Orr Stakes at Caulfield.The Peter Moody-trained four-year-old mare has now won three races at the highest level and eight of her 11 starts but Saturday's easy victory was her first against the males and her first at weight-for-age.Ridden by stable jockey Luke Nolen, Typhoon Tracy ($1.40 fav) sat off race leader Danzylum and kicked clear in the straight for a 1-3/4 lengt

Typhoon Tracy is likely to stay at home and not seek overseas options despite chalking up her third Group One success in the CF Orr Stakes at Caulfield.

The Peter Moody-trained four-year-old mare has now won three races at the highest level and eight of her 11 starts but Saturday's easy victory was her first against the males and her first at weight-for-age.

Ridden by stable jockey Luke Nolen, Typhoon Tracy ($1.40 fav) sat off race leader Danzylum and kicked clear in the straight for a 1-3/4 length victory over Heart Of Dreams ($6.50) with comeback horse Sirmione ($81) a short head away third.

"It's nice to get that one in open company out of the way," Moody said.

"It's her first win away from mares' grade. The second and third horses are Group One weight-for-age winners so we never expected it to be easy and she's still got nice improvement off the back of that.

"She got a lovely run, it went as planned. We thought Danzylum would lead and we'd pop straight off the fence behind him and when they run home the last 400 metres in 21-1/2 (seconds) she's going to be hard to run down."

Moody said there were upwards of a dozen Group One races at 1400 to 1600 metres for Typhoon Tracy in Australia over the next three months although he hadn't yet ruled out an overseas trip for the Red Ransom mare.

"The owners are open-minded but it would be a tall order to take her away. Staying home would be favourite," the Caulfield trainer said.

"The Hong Kong Mile would be the immediate option if she won the Futurity."

Typhoon Tracy will chase her fourth Group One success in the Futurity (1600m) on her home track on February 27.

"If you go back through her record, her most brilliant wins are when she's had to run fast first sectionals and she just breaks their hearts and continues running," Moody said.

"The days she's got it soft she's either disappointed a little or just fallen in. So drawing 18 is really a bonus because she runs them ragged.

"It was a nice soft kick-off hopefully for a fruitful preparation.

"We're going to the Futurity in two weeks, these are the two races that we targeted and we haven't pencilled anything in beyond that at this stage."

The Bart Cummings-trained Sirmione upstaged stablemate Viewed (sixth) with his placing and jockey Dwayne Dunn was rapt with his effort.

"It was a terrific run for a horse who had nearly a year off," he said.

"He seems great, pulled up well and I think he's in for a very good campaign."

Viewed's jockey Steven Arnold said coming back from the 3200m of last year's Melbourne Cup, in which he finished seventh, was a "a bit of a test for a staying horse like him".

"I'm happy," he added.

Craig Newitt said Typhoon Tracy had too much speed for his mount Heart Of Dreams.

Trainer Mark Kavanagh was happy enough with the first-up run of reigning Melbourne Cup winner Shocking who was eighth of the nine runners.

"Looking at the sectionals, I'm not disappointed because they didn't go hard early," he said.

Craig Williams was also happy with his mount Littorio who ran fifth after 10 months off the scene.

"The race wasn't run to suit him," he said.