"I have absolutely no idea why they wouldn't let me into the country," says Morris. "The most controversial photo I would have taken would have been the MCC team sitting on the Great Wall of China."
Following the initial refusal Morris wrote to the Chinese government assuring them he would seek written permission from them if he wished to sell any images to publications. They still refused.
"If the ICC is so keen for China to play cricket, then it should go out of its way to make sure these things don't happen," says Morris. "The success and joy of cricket isn't just about playing; it's about reporting it too. It's integral.
"You'd like to think the ICC would get involved. If it had been a Sky TV reporter and camera crew that had their visa application denied, then I'm sure they would have got involved. It's what the ICC is there for."
"MCC is very disappointed that Graham wasn't allowed a visa," says Iain Wilton, MCC's head of communication. "The tour was supposed to be good for MCC, good for cricket in general and good for the growth and promotion of the game in China."
When The Wisden Cricketer contacted the ICC, it admitted it was the first it had heard of the incident. The ICC approached the Chinese Cricket Association, who offered no official comment but did say that the vetting of media personnel is more diligent than that of tourists and can take up to two months. It assured the ICC that "Graham Morris wasn't singled out." The CCA also said that visa applications for the media will be relaxed in time for the Olympics.
Speed and the former Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Shaharyar Khan - appointed by the Asian Cricket Council to chair a 'Committee to Evaluate China' - visited Beijing in mid-September. There they announced that the ICC and ACC had granted the CCA £200,000.
Syed Ahraful Huq, chief executive of the ACC, said during Speed's visit: "The potential benefits and commercial revenues from (China's) presence in the cricket world are enormous. As soon as China breaks through, I foresee the total global revenues for cricket increasing by 30 or 40%."

