White wins: There are some situations involving a rook pawn and the wrong bishop.
If the bishop were on the other color it could force the black king out of the corner and the pawn could promote and win.
In this position Black is able to draw because his bishop is on the right color: and there is no way for White to make progress.
In this 1952 game between László Szabó and World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik,[8] Black was defending two pawns down – a position that would normally be a win for White.
He promoted his pawn on move 76 and it was immediately captured by Black, resulting in a rook versus bishop endgame (see pawnless chess endings#Common pawnless endings (rook and minor pieces)) that was drawn two moves later.
[11] In this type of position when the pawns are facing each other and blocked, the result often depends on which color the bishop is on.