Early on, Bhogle played A Div cricket for a long time in Hyderabad and represented Osmania University at the Rohinton Baria Tournament. He started commentating at the age of 19 with
All India Radio, while living in Hyderabad. In 1991–92, he became the first Indian commentator to be invited by the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation during India's cricket series before the
1992 Cricket World Cup. He has since worked for
ABC Radio Grandstand during India's Australian tours, and for eight years worked for the
BBC as part of their commentary team in the
1996 and the
1999 Cricket World Cups. Since 1995, he has been presenting live cricket from all around the world for ESPN STAR Sports and was part of the commentary team that included
Ravi Shastri,
Sunil Gavaskar, and
Alan Wilkins along with
Geoff Boycott and
Navjot Singh Sidhu, for a few seasons, and later,
Ian Chappell and
Sanjay Manjrekar. He covered the 2011–12 series in Australia solely for ABC Radio. Bhogle has been covering all
Indian Premier League seasons since 2009. He was dropped from the commentary team by BCCI in April 2016. No official reason was given, but according to media reports, it was due to a combination of factors including criticism from Indian players and an incident during the opening game of the T20 World Cup where Bhogle's access between Hindi and English commentary boxes was restricted. He has hosted television programs such as
Harsha Online,
Harsha Unplugged and
School Quiz Olympiad for
ESPN and
Star Sports. Bhogle had a television programme named after him,
Harsha ki khoj(), that strove to find broadcasting talent in India. Bhogle expanded his online presence by hosting
Out of the Box with Harsha Bhogle on
YouTube. Bhogle was voted the favourite TV cricket commentator by ESPNcricinfo users based on a worldwide poll. Bhogle has also anchored BBC's travel serial
Travel India and Business Today Acumen Business Quiz and Debate competitions. Bhogle was the advisor to the
Mumbai Indians for the 2008
IPL. Bhogle has published and authored a number of books, including a biography of
Mohammad Azharuddin and a collection of columns in
The Indian Express,
Out of the Box – Watching the Game We Love and is also a columnist for the Chennai-based "The Sportstar" a subsidiary of The Hindu group of Publications under the title "Hitting Hard" by Bhogle. (2009). Bhogle has presented the program
Travel India: With Harsha Bhogle on the
Discovery channel and
TLC. In the
2011 World Cup held in
India,
Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh, he anchored the pre and post match shows that featured
Simon Hughes,
Navjot Singh Sidhu,
Sunil Gavaskar,
Tony Greig and
Sourav Ganguly. In 2013, he was given the seat in commentary by
Ian Bishop to conduct the final interviews when
Sachin Tendulkar played his final test. Bhogle currently hosts a weekly show called "This Week's Special" aired on Star Sports. The show takes the viewers back in time to make them relive cricketing memories from the past. The first episode was aired from 1 October 2015. On 10 April 2016 His IPL contract as a commentator was terminated. The decision came as a surprise for the voice of Indian cricket since he had conducted the Season 9 draft auction, featured in the league's promotional videos, was in the commentators’ 51-day-long duty roster, and even had his flight booked by the production house. Board (BCCI) officials said Bhogle had an angry exchange with a cricket official at the venue as he wanted him to open the door, and this reached the Nagpur-based BCCI president Shashank Manohar. Those in the know said this incident was the trigger that resulted in Bhogle losing out. He has been a part of Times Group subsidiary
Cricbuzz since 2016 and writes articles as well as doing video analyses with them. Bhogle is currently one of the Board of Governors of IIM Udaipur. On 16 May 2019, he was named among the 24 commentators for the
2019 ICC World Cup held in
England and
Wales. During the 2nd test of Bangladesh's tour of India, the 1st D/N test of both Indian and Bangladeshi cricket teams, a few Bangladeshi batsmen were struck by the pink ball. Bhogle raised concerns about the visibility of the ball, with Sanjay Manjrekar, his fellow commentator, replying that only people like Bhogle would need to ask such questions as they have not played at that level. This on-air spat raised many eyebrows. == Books ==