There must be a description of the ball and its environment,
somewhere earlier on the sheet where we can't see it. We
don't know what the conditions and environment are around
the ball as it moves downward. So I can only answer in the
most general way, and make up some scenarios.
If the ball is falling from an airplane, then it has to use some
of its energy to push air out of the way, and even then, it loses
some more energy as the air molecules scrape against its side.
This is all called 'air resistance'. It's a form of friction, the form that
takes energy away from anything that's moving through air.
If the ball is rolling across the lawn, then it takes some energy
to bend the blades of grass down along its path. That's why a
ball that's rolling anywhere on Earth always stops, although
Newton's laws of motion say that an object in motion always
keeps moving and doesn't stop.