...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, and ...Ka3 looks like a very strong plan
Is there aay to win this position? I played it as a draw...
That fails to Rxa4+
Well, that's a problem, but it's not the biggest one. White can just bring the king around to the queenside and keep any Exchange sac on h7 shenanigans from working. This means that the only plan that gives winning chances for Black is to sac the a-pawn, put the king on c3, and then use ...Re8+ to pick off the d3-pawn.
I'll try some different plans against Fritz 8 and see if anything works
EDIT: White draws by bringing the king up to support the h7-pawn
I think Black begins with Re8+, intending to bring the rook behind the White K and h-pawn. White's central pawns can't survive, though Black might need to give up his a-pawn to get them.
Black moving his rook with the intention to move it off the back row allows white to queen with h8=Q
What if white countered Khpa's plan with that, though? Black's king can't leave the a-file without giving up his pawn.
Any plans to get the rook involved risk white queening... I can't see any good options for black, even though black is up on material.
That fails to Rxa4+
I don't get it. What's wrong with the plan first sugested (...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, and ...Ka3)? Black will be defending the a pawn from b4 so Rxa4 is simply me by Kxa4.
After black gets his king to a3 and pawn on a4 (white can only wait it seems) black can play the maneuver Rf8-f2 since the bishop is guarding the h8 square. White can try to play Rd7 in response to Rf8 because the threat of Rxd4+ followed by h8=Q+ prevents the next move Rf2. But Re7 lets black play Kxa2 and queen his own pawn.
Basically black will play ...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, ...Ka3 and Rf8 with the idea of Rf2. This looks winning. After all, white is down a piece.
That fails to Rxa4+
I don't get it. What's wrong with the plan first sugested (...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, and ...Ka3)? Black will be defending the a pawn from b4 so Rxa4 is simply me by Kxa4.
After black gets his king to a3 and pawn on a4 (white can only wait it seems) black can play the maneuver Rf8-f2 since the bishop is guarding the h8 square. White can try to play Re7 in response to Rf8 because the threat of Rxd4+ followed by h8=Q+ prevents the next move Rf2. But Re7 lets black play Kxa2 and queen his own pawn.
Basically black will play ...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, ...Ka3 and Rf8 with the idea of Rf2. This looks winning. After all, white is down a piece.
If white plays a3 after black plays a5, Kb4 is an illegal move.
That fails to Rxa4+
I don't get it. What's wrong with the plan first sugested (...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, and ...Ka3)? Black will be defending the a pawn from b4 so Rxa4 is simply me by Kxa4.
After black gets his king to a3 and pawn on a4 (white can only wait it seems) black can play the maneuver Rf8-f2 since the bishop is guarding the h8 square. White can try to play Re7 in response to Rf8 because the threat of Rxd4+ followed by h8=Q+ prevents the next move Rf2. But Re7 lets black play Kxa2 and queen his own pawn.
Basically black will play ...a5 followed by ...Kb4, ...a4, ...Ka3 and Rf8 with the idea of Rf2. This looks winning. After all, white is down a piece.
If white plays a3 after black plays a5, Kb4 is an illegal move.
The plan still works: 1...a5 2.a3 Rf8 and if 2.Rd7 Kxa3. 0-1.
I think Kc3 would be a blunder there. I prefer, in that line, Re5+. It plays out to a drawish line, that way too (my variation is a draw according to nalimov tablebases). Though, I'm not the best endgame player so there may be a better resource there. However. I still like Re5+ line earlier. Still probably drawish but seems a bit better to me.
That said, I haven't analyzed that fully and it may not work out.
Assuming the weakest move available doesn't lend itself well to persuasive analysis.
The idea behind Re8+ is to bring the rook from h8 (a poor location) to h2 (an active location), from where (1) it stops the h-pawn from promoting (the White K can't help) and (2) it can harass the White K. The Black B stays on d4, until Black has taken the White central pawns and begins to push his passer ... at which time the B is decisive.

BLACK TO PLAY.
It seems like both players were stuck. Black had to protect the back row, and white had to protect his pawn one space away from queening.
Is there any way that either player could have won this game?