Thanks, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Steve covered some of the numbers, but I am going to walk you through the results in more detail. The second quarter sales of $1.55 billion and comparable sales of negative 6.9% fell short of our expectations, primarily due to a decline in store traffic compared to last year. Our comp transactions declined 7.4%, while comp ticket increased by 0.5% compared to last year. Our primary customers, those with annual incomes of between $50,000 and $150,000, remain very budget conscious and cautious, showing low consumer sentiment for certain discretionary categories. We also see an increase in credit card and buy now pay later usage in conjunction with household debt continuing to reach multiyear highs. So while inflation has moderated, prices are still high and that along with an increase in personal debt is impacting spend in our category. During the quarter, we did see a sales trajectory lift during the major shopping events, but it was not enough to offset the slow periods in between. Speaking to the trends of the quarter, May was impacted by tornadoes in our two biggest markets, Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth. Sales improved in June, but weakened in July due to Hurricane Beryl hitting the Houston area, the impact of temporary outbound inventory issues at our Georgia distribution center and a compressed back-to-school shopping period. Our gross margin rate in the second quarter was 36.1%, a 50 basis point increase compared to Q2 of last year, primarily driven by inventory cost management and lower freight expense. Shrink was five basis points better than last year as a percentage of sales. Our second quarter SG&A expense of $368.6 million was $16 million, or 150 basis points higher than Q2 of last year. All of the increase is attributable to spend on our growth initiatives, primarily for new stores and technology. We are confident in our long range plan and are committed to investing in it, while also controlling our existing cost structure. Overall, in the second quarter, Academy had a double-digit EBIT margin rate of 12% and generated net income of $142.6 million and diluted earnings per share of $1.95. Adjusted net income, which excludes stock-based comp of $8 million, was $148.6 million, or $2.03 in adjusted earnings per share. Looking at the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $325 million in cash. Our inventory balance was $1.37 billion, an increase of 4% compared to last year. Total inventory units were flat, and this includes having an additional 15 stores compared to the end of Q2 2023. On a per store basis, inventory units were down 5%. The merchandising team continues to do a great job of managing our inventory in sync with our sales. In terms of capital allocation, our strategy remains the same, to execute against our three pillars, which are; one, financial stability; two, self-funding our growth initiatives; and three, increasing shareholder return through share repurchases and dividends. We believe these priorities will help drive future sales and earnings growth as well as increase shareholder value. In Q2, we generated approximately $91 million in cash from operations. We invested $41 million in our growth initiatives, repurchased approximately 1.8 million shares for $99 million, and paid out $8 million in dividends. Year-to-date, Academy has generated approximately $217 million of adjusted free cash flow, compared to $136 million during the first half of 2023. This is a 60% increase, driven by strong retail operations across Academy. Tangible examples include; one, disciplined inventory control leading to a decline in units per store; two, managing promotions in a strained economy resulting in 10 basis points of year-to-date gross margin rate expansion; three, controlling expenses while investing in growth initiatives; and four, reducing the amount of capital it takes to open new stores. Finally, the Board recently approved a dividend of $0.11 share payable on October 17, 2024 to stockholders of record as of September 19, 2024. Now, turning to our outlook for the remainder of the year. Based on the current state of the consumer and our year-to-date results, we are revising our previous guidance for fiscal 2024. One note, in addition to GAAP measures and adjusted free cash flow, we are also providing guidance on two non-GAAP measures, adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per share. Our revised guidance is as follows. Net sales are expected to range from $5.9 billion to $6.07 billion, with comparable sales of negative 6% to negative 3%. Let me provide a bridge between the low end and the high end of the comp range. The low end of the range assumes that the economy does not improve meaningfully over the back half of the year and that there is no real change in our customers behavior. The delta from the low end to the high end estimates that sales remain on the current August trend, and we benefit from some or all of the plans and tactics we are deploying to drive traffic and sales in our stores and online. These include adding 12 to 14 new stores, focusing on promotional efforts around the key shopping events utilizing our customer data platform, being more pronounced with our value messaging, bringing in more new and innovative products, capitalizing on our resurgent outdoor business, growing the new My Academy loyalty program, and finally leveraging Door Dash, especially after the Christmas shipping cutoff dates. Our gross margin rate is still expected to range from 34.3% to 34.7%. Our SG&A expense rate is now expected to be approximately 150 basis points higher than in 2023. GAAP net income of between $400 million and $460 million. Adjusted net income which excludes certain estimated expenses, primarily stock-based compensation of approximately $27 million, is forecast to range from $420 million to $480 million. GAAP diluted earnings per share of $5.45 to $6.20, and adjusted diluted earnings per share of $5.75 to $6.50. The earnings per share estimates are based on a revised share count of 73.5 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding for the full year. This amount does not include any potential future repurchase activity using our remaining $476 million authorization. We also remain confident in the strength of our cash flows and still expect to generate between $290 million and $340 million of adjusted free cash flow, including $175 million to $225 million of capital expenditures. The reduction in CapEx guidance is primarily from the work of our real estate and construction team, finding ways to open stores more efficiently and building those cost savings not only into 2024, but '25 and beyond. We are proud of the value engineering work Sam Johnson and his real estate team have done in lowering the cost profile of our new stores. When we first restarted opening stores in FY '22, we were far from optimized. As we build our capabilities and leverage our scale, we have found a number of ways to optimize costs, inclusive of raw material procurement, construction services and landlord participation. This value engineering is also benefiting our store remodel program, allowing us to better serve our team members and customers for less. Finally, as we focus on our growth strategy, we have elected to pursue fewer technical projects to focus on our biggest projects associated with omnichannel, our customer data platform and our new WMS system. Through the first half of the year, our sales were lower than expected, but we have prudently managed expenses, resulting in a double-digit EBIT margin. We also increased our adjusted free cash flow by 60% over last year, which we utilized to repurchase 3.8 million shares, or 5% of the outstanding shares of the company. At the same time, we have self-funded the investments in the growth pillars of our long range plan. We believe the actions we are taking to grow the business will drive future sales and earnings growth. With that, we will now open it up for questions.