The lattice QCD studies indicate that the critical temperature Tc≃260−280 MeV of the deconfinement phase transition in quenched QCD is
considerably smaller than the lowest-lying glueball mass mG≃1500−1700 MeV, i.e., Tc≪mG. As a consequence of this large
difference, the thermal excitation of the glueball in the confinement phase is
strongly suppressed by the statistical factor as e−mG/Tc≃0.00207 even near T≃Tc. We consider its physical implication, and
argue the abnormal feature of the deconfinement phase transition in quenched
QCD from the statistical viewpoint. To appreciate this, we demonstrate a
statistical argument of the QCD phase transition using the recent lattice QCD
data. From the phenomenological relation among Tc and the glueball mass, the
deconfinement transition is found to take place in quenched QCD before a
reasonable amount of glueballs is thermally excited. In this way, quenched QCD
reveals a question ``what is the trigger of the deconfinement phase transition
?''Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure