Thanks, Matt. Good morning to everyone, and thank you for joining us on our fourth quarter earnings call. During our call today, will provide details on the results for both Q4 and 2023 full year. We'll also share a progress update on achieving our long-range goals, and our thoughts on initial guidance for 2024. First, I'd like to start with our Q4 performance. As you saw from the results we announced earlier this morning, we had an improvement in our trend during the fourth quarter, with sales coming in at $1.8 billion, which was up 2.8% in total, and translated into a negative 3.6% comp. This was a 400 basis point improvement in comp sales trend versus the negative 7.6% we ran during the first three quarters of the year. Our adjusted earnings per share for the fourth quarter, came in at $2.21, an increase of 8% versus last year. We would characterize the cadence of the quarter as reverting back to the traffic patterns and volume progression that we traditionally saw pre-pandemic. There was less pull forward of demand in early November than we'd experienced over the last couple years when customers shopped early based on scarcity of supply. We then saw the traditional acceleration in business, during Thanksgiving and Cyber Week, followed by a lull in traffic during the middle part of December. We finished holiday with a strong surge of sales and traffic, the week leading up to Christmas, but sustained into the post-Christmas time period and early January. The sales increase we ran in December made it the strongest month of both the quarter and the past year. Based on these results, when you pull back and look at the full year 2023 sales, we came in at $6.2 billion or negative 6.5% comp. These results were at the high end of our annual guidance and on a 52-week basis remain roughly up 25%, versus pre-pandemic levels. Moving on to gross margin, the quarter came in at 33.3%, which is a 50 basis point improvement above last year. This increase was primarily driven, by inventory and freight savings, partially offset by our merchandise margins. Holiday season played out as we anticipated. It was more promotional than the past couple of Christmases, but still not back to the discount levels that were common pre-pandemic. For the full year, our gross margin rate came in at 34.3% or 30 basis points below last year, which was at the high end of our guidance, remains roughly 500 basis points higher than the margins we ran pre-pandemic. A combination of sales and margin performance allowed us to generate adjusted earnings per share, for the full year of $6.96. Now I'd like to give you an update on our progress, against the long-range plan goals we issued in April of 2023, and our path towards achieving them as we move forward. 2023 was a busy year for us, and we made progress across multiple fronts. We opened 14 new stores, which is five more stores than we opened in 2022. The team is applying learnings for the prior year's openings, and as a result, these stores are projected, to have a higher year 1 volume than the '22 [ vintage ]. We also installed our new customer data platform, which is going to be a huge unlock for us moving forward, as we gain greater insights into our customer shopping patterns. This new tool, allows us to increase, our targeted marketing capabilities, which we believe will drive more store visits, and greater sales through our conversion rates. The team also laid the groundwork, for the launch of our new Warehouse Management System, or WMS for short, which we'll be rolling out to all of our distribution centers over the next 18 to 24 months. We're also proud to give back to the communities we serve. 2023, through direct giving, partnership support, merchant-wise discounts, various organizations, academy distributed over $30 million of our customers and local and national charities. Another important accomplishment for us, was the strengthening of our executive team, with the addition of Chad Fox as our new Chief Customer Officer, and Rob Howell as our Chief Supply Chain Officer. In addition to these two talented and experienced executives, coupled with combining supply chain and stores under our President, Sam Johnson, provides the right structure and team, to help accelerate our progress against our long range goals. While we made good headway across multiple fronts. One place we failed to make progress is growing our top line sales. We believe that the primary driver of our sales decline was underlying weakness in our consumer spending on durable goods, due to a weakening in overall consumer health. In that this, we're increasing our focus around delivering an outstanding value proposition to our customers in order to help them stretch their wallet as they are out with their family for all of their sports and outdoor activities. A great example of this is a promotion we just ran to kick-off baseball in early March. The team created a package, where we provided a parent all the gear their child would need to start T-ball, including a glove, hat, helmet and [indiscernible] bag, all for under $100. In other cases, we'll be lowering prices in key categories such as bikes and grills, as we head into the summer months. Turning to Slide 5 of the supplemental deck, while we continue to manage through the short-term choppiness in the business, we remain focused on delivering against the long range goals that, we articulated last spring. To reiterate a few of the key metrics, our plan is to grow top line sales to $10 billion plus, generate earnings of 10%, or greater, keep a 13.5% adjusted EBIT margin rate, drive our dotcom penetration to 15% of total revenue or greater, and thoughtfully invest in our cash flows into initiatives that drive a 30% ROIC. We've learned a lot over the past year, and as we move forward, we'll continue to refine the tactics for us achieving our long range goals. We've done a deep dive on the 23 stores that we opened up in 2022 and 2023. We're applying the lessons we've learned from these two vintages for our new store opening plans moving forward. Page 7 of the supplemental deck details, how we're fine tuning our forecast, for new store openings. Initially, we modeled 120 to 140 stores, with a year 1 volume target of $18 million that would mature over 5 years. The majority of the stores that we've opened up over the past 2 years have been in newer markets. As we've discussed previously, we're seeing faster ramps in stores open in existing markets. We have higher brand awareness and slower ramps in stores open in newer markets so the customers are less familiar with Academy. Based on this, we're revising our new store forecast for year 1 sales volume to be between $12 million to $16 million with a 5-year ramp maturity. The second change is how we're building out and sequencing our new store pipeline. Moving forward, we'll strive for a better balance each year with roughly half the new stores, being opened in existing markets, and the other half in new, or adjacent markets. It's also important for us to balance our openings by time of year. We've learned that stores open in the first half of the year get out of the gate faster than stores open up in Q3 and Q4. Based on this, starting in 2025 and forward, we're building our new store pipeline, to support roughly 50% of the stores for each year to open up in first and second quarters. Another win is that we've seen strong results in smaller and mid-sized markets. While these stores may have slightly lower volume potential, the favorable expense structure it takes to run these stores helps ensure the profitable investments, and clear our ROIC hurdles. As we build out our future pipeline, we're opening the aperture of our consideration set to include more single or two-store markets versus focusing primarily on large multi-store markets. Once again, we have balanced approach between various market sizes. Finally, over the past 18 months, we've opened up four new stores in Southern and Central Indiana. While they did not all open in the same weekend, having a cluster of stores that opened in a relative [ close-time ] proximity to each other helps us gain greater efficiencies, across multiple fronts, with the clear win being and driving greater marketing synergy. As we move into 2025 and beyond, our goal will be to go into new markets with a greater density of new store openings around the same time. The end result of all this work is that we believe we have an opportunity to open up, even more stores than we initially modeled in our long-range plan. As you can see on Slide #7, our revised new store growth plan now projects 160 to 180 stores over the next 5 years, with a target of 15 to 17 of them opening up in 2024. The second pillar of our growth strategy is to drive our dotcom penetration, to 15% of total revenue. On the surface, this doesn't seem like an overly audacious goal, when you consider that many other retailers are already at or above this level of penetration. However, when you consider that we're expanding our store base by greater than 50% during the same time period, it means that we'll have to double our dotcom sales over the next 5 years in order to hit this goal, which would characterize as challenging, but achievable. The major driver of this strategy, will be to have a laser focus on the customer, with a mission to seamlessly streamline the shopping experience, across all touch points. This was the primary reason we recently created our new Chief Customer Officer position, and hired Chad Fox to fill this role. We've combine our marketing, customer analytics, and e-commerce teams into 1 organization to make more nimble while also driving greater synergies across the organization. Chad is a seasoned executive, who has helped other large retailers such as Walmart and Dollar General accomplish these same goals. He's a data-driven merchant, who's going to help us lever our new customer data platform, drive greater customer engagement, and new customer acquisition. The key focuses for Chad over the next year will be driving increased traffic to our physical and digital stores, dramatically improving the site experience on both academy.com and our mobile app, improving customer identification and engagement with the rollout of an expanded loyalty program. The third leg of our growth plan is to drive greater productivity out of our existing businesses and assets. We've made a lot of progress in upgrading our merchandising, processes and procedures, along with our store execution over the past several years, which has resulted in the volume and margin gains that we've made. While these initiatives are in the middle to later innings, we believe that there's still opportunity, for improvement on both these fronts. But what the Chad and his team are focused on will also help accelerate growth from these initiatives. While we believe we have the most untapped opportunity to improve efficiency is the work we're undertaking to strengthen our supply chain infrastructure and capabilities. Hiring Rob Howell, as our new Chief Supply Chain Officer, will be a huge unlock for us as we build out our supply chain capabilities. He's a skilled strategist who helped develop a world-class supply chain for Sysco. His deep experience in working with Manhattan, would also help us ensure that the WMS rollout we're embarking on over the next 18 to 24 months goes as smoothly as possible. In the short term, we're focused on improving our cross-stock with steep flow and speeding up the pace at which we speak to move out to the stores. This will allow us to reduce the average inventory we carry, resulting in increased turnover, while also freeing up cash flow. Rob will also be reviewing the current assumptions in our long-range plan to identify ways to drive greater efficiencies across all of our existing assets. One preliminary outcome from this review that we now believe we can deliver improved utilization of our existing DC network. The result of this is that our forecasted need of a fourth distribution center will move from a 2026 go live 2027 or 2028. As you can see, we're making solid progress across multiple fronts. That being said, as we turn our focus to 2024 guidance, the short-term economic outlook remains cloudy. The customer continues to be under pressure, and is being very thoughtful over when and how they will spend their money. The upcoming election, coupled with a compressed holiday calendar, also adds a degree of uncertainty to the outlook for the year. Based on these factors, we're conservatively modeling a negative 4 to plus 1 comp for next year, which would translate into a negative 1.5% plus 3% total sales growth for the year. We believe this is a prudent base, to build our expense and receipt plans off of, knowing that we can chase the business, if we see the headwinds abate, they'll start trending upward. I'm now going to turn it over to Carl Ford, our CFO to walk you through a deeper dive on our Q4, and full year financial performance, along with an expanded look at our 2024 guidance.