One season and 101 losses after
Theo Epstein took over as the Cubs’ president, there remains no more certain a timetable for when this overmatched, rebuilding team will be able to contend.

But if the Cubs plan to recover enough to take on the look of a major-league team again by next season — and if the front-office plans to give the established holdovers and the field staff a chance to be competitive — it means diving into a part of offseason business Epstein ideally would like to skip.

Merely to put a representative team on the field, the Cubs will have to acquire at least two starting pitchers and probably three from outside the organization. That means working through a free-agent market slim on All-Star talent but with enough middle-rotation veterans to offer the Cubs a chance to use their significant payroll flexibility to put together a competitive staff.

The issue is less whether they will be able to do it than whether they will be willing to do it.

‘‘There are going to be a lot of teams looking at a pretty limited field,’’ Epstein said. ‘‘I don’t think there’s going to be great value to be had out there. But I think there’s some quality, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see us sign a free agent or two for our rotation.’’

Epstein said this during a nearly 40-minute media conference in which he also stressed ‘‘patience’’ for the fans, offered no guesses on a timeline for being competitive again and continued to express a long-held disdain for using free agency at all.

That said, ‘‘If there’s the right player at the right contract, even at a significant length, if we believe in that player and we believe it’s a good investment, we won’t shy away from it,’’ he said.

This winter might be a good test of that. Last offseason, facing steep pitching deficits on the roster, the Cubs signed left-hander Paul
Maholm to a modest, short-term deal and added left-hander Travis Wood in a baseball-value trade and right-hander Chris Volstad in a Carlos Zambrano-dump trade.

With right-hander Matt Garza expected back healthy and right-hander Jeff Samardzija having established himself as a potential front-line starter, getting two
middle-rotation pitchers might put the Cubs in position to at least have a fighting chance at a decent start.

And several players who figure to be on the 2013 roster have pointed to the midseason roster tear-down, during which Maholm was ‘‘flipped’’ for prospects, as acute motivation for a fast start in April and May.

Two former Cy Young Award winners, right-handers Jake Peavy and Zack Greinke, are among the potential free agents, but neither is on the Cubs’ radar, nor should they be. Peavy has a track record of injuries and figures to command an overvalued price/length of contract coming off his 219-
inning season with the White Sox. And Greinke not only is a strong candidate to re-sign with the Los Angeles Angels, but the Cubs don’t consider a pitcher with a history of social-anxiety issues a good fit for the Chicago market.

More along the Cubs’ lines is right-hander Shaun Marcum, a
solid middle-rotation pitcher who has a relationship with pitching coach Chris Bosio and might come at a relative bargain after some
injury issues in 2012.

Right-hander Anibal Sanchez, a former fast-rising prospect the Miami Marlins traded to the
Detroit Tigers this season, is another possible fit, along with the Washington Nationals’ Edwin Jackson, a pitcher with high-end ability who might be had for a shorter-term deal, depending on how the market develops.

Landing two pitchers of that caliber might help nurture at least some of the patience Epstein keeps saying fans need to have.