Let $f_1,\ldots,f_r\in\Bbb C[x_1,\ldots,x_n]$ define a map $f\colon\Bbb C^n\to\Bbb C^r$. Let $Z:=Z(f_1,\ldots,f_r)\subseteq \Bbb C^n$ be the variety cut out by the $f_i$, and assume that $Z$ is nonempty. Define \begin{align*} d:\Bbb C^n &\longrightarrow \Bbb R_+ \\ x &\longmapsto \operatorname{dist}(x,Z)=\inf_{z\in Z}\|x-z\|, \end{align*} the distance from $Z$. I conjecture that $$\exists g\in\Bbb C[T]: \forall x\in\Bbb C^n: \|f(x)\|\ge |g(d(x))|.$$
My question is: Am I right? If so, can you name a reference or a result from which this follows?
For $n=r=1$, the statement is certainly true. Let $f\in\Bbb C[x]$ and write $$f = u\cdot (x-\lambda_1)\cdots(x-\lambda_k)$$ for $u\in\Bbb C^\times$ and $\lambda_1,\ldots,\lambda_k\in\Bbb C$. Now, we have $Z=\{\lambda_1,\ldots,\lambda_k\}$ and $d(x)=\min_i |x-\lambda_i|.$ If we pick $g(T):=|u|\cdot T^k$, then $$|f(x)|\ge |u|\cdot|x-\lambda_1|\cdots|x-\lambda_k|\ge |u|\cdot d(x)^k = |g(d(x))|.$$