In British India, he played for the Europeans cricket team in the Bombay Tournament, in addition to being Bengal's first captain in the Ranji Trophy.
He made four further first-class appearances for Oxford in 1913, in addition to playing three matches for Hampshire in the County Championship.
[11] Returning to India after the 1921 season, Hosie made two appearances in the 1921–22 Bombay Quadrangular for the Europeans cricket team against the Hindus and the Parsees.
[5] Against the Hindus in the December 1924, he made 200 runs in an innings; this would be the only occurrence of a double-century in the history of the Bombay Tournament.
[13] He remained in England during the summer of 1925, playing ten times in the County Championship and twice for the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) against Oxford and Cambridge Universities.
There in December 1926, he led an All-India team in an unofficial Test match at Calcutta against Arthur Gilligan's touring MCC side.
He was chairman of selectors for their first home Test series against England in December 1933–March 1934, much to the anger of Indian nationalists.
[8] He would spend the next five years playing first-class cricket India for a variety of ad-hoc teams, though he did not feature in any Bombay Tournament matches.
[5] He returned to England in 1935, where he played his final season for Hampshire, making eleven appearances in the County Championship,[5] deputising as captain for Geoffrey Lowndes in five of these matches.
[5] Hosie played for his former Hampshire captain, Baron Tennyson's, touring team against the Maharaja of Cooch-Behar's XI at Calutta in January 1938, before making two final first-class appearances in England in 1938 for the Free Foresters and the MCC.