“…We begin with the well-known Bernstein inequalities [2] for the uniform norm on the unit disk in the plane: namely, if p(z) is a polynomial of degree n, then Inequality (1.1) is a direct consequence of Bernstein's theorem on the derivative of a trigonometric polynomial [16], and inequality (1.2) follows from the maximum modulus theorem (see [14,Problem 269]). The reverse analogue of the inequality (1.2) whenever R ≤ 1 is given by Varga [17], and he proved that, if p(z) is a polynomial of degree n, then for 0 ≤ r ≤ 1 For the class of polynomials having no zero inside the unit circle, it was Rivlin [15] who proved that, if p(z) is a polynomial of degree n having no zero in |z| < 1, then for 0 ≤ r ≤ 1 The above inequalities are the starting point of a rich literature concerning their extensions, generalizations and improvements in several directions, see the papers ( [1,9,13,7,4,5,10,3,11]) to mention only a few. For a deeper understanding about this kind of inequalities and their applications, we refer to the monographs [12,8].…”