That being said, we still have a lot of business ahead of us over the next four weeks. Shifting back to third quarter results, it is clear that our strategies are not only working but continue to accelerate as they take hold. A couple of proof points to support this are, first, we're in our fourth year of new store openings, and we now have 26 new stores from the 2022 through 2024 vintages in our comp base. And by this time next year, we'll have an additional 24. These stores in aggregate comp low single digits in Q1, mid-single digits in Q2, and ran a high single-digit comp in Q3. Second, the foundational work we've done around improving our omnichannel experience continues to pay dividends, with growth in the channel accelerating from plus 10% in Q1 to 18% in Q2 and 22% in Q3. Lastly, investments in delivering more on-trend products from both the Jordan brand and Nike helped drive high single-digit growth in the combined brands and are helping bring in new higher-income customers into Academy. Turning to our third quarter results, as you saw from our earnings release earlier today, sales came in at $1.38 billion, which was up 3% to last year, translating into a negative 0.9% comp. We're encouraged by the strong reaction from our customers during the back-to-school season and for our holiday assortment at the tail end of the quarter, as we saw cooler temperatures across our geography. We were also pleased by the progress we made improving average unit retails to help offset the increased tariff expense we are seeing this year. During the quarter, average unit retail steadily improved and was up mid to high single digits versus last year. This improvement also helped increase our gross margin rate to 35.7%, up 170 basis points from last year. We've been walking a bit of a tightrope this year as we work to steadily raise AURs while also maintaining our value leadership in our space. I can assure you that we're continuously monitoring pricing relative to key competitors and are highly confident that we have the right pricing, architecture, and promotional plan in place to deliver a strong holiday season. Looking at category performance across the business, Sports and Rec was our strongest division, posting a 6% increase driven by solid growth in our baseball, outdoor cooking, fitness equipment, and bicycle businesses. Apparel sales grew 3%, driven by strength in key national brands such as Nike, Jordan, Carhartt, Ariat, and Berlevo, along with solid growth in our private brands such as Magellan and Freely. Our footwear business grew 2%, driven by performance running brands such as Nike, Brooks, ASICS, and New Balance, all of which drove strong comps. Sales in our Outdoor business also grew 2% for the quarter, with strength in fishing, hunting gear, and firearms. We did see some softness in our ammo business as we started to lap the election run-up from last year. Once we got past the election time period in early November, while still running negative, we've seen the ammo sales trend improve. As we continue to grow top-line sales, we also remain focused on growing our market share. As you know, most of the new stores we're opening are in new or underserved markets, and virtually every dollar of sales from these new stores translates into share gains for us. In many cases, these gains come from smaller independents who lack our scale and pricing power, or in some cases from larger players that do not offer the value and diversity of assortment we carry. With a business as complex as ours, we have to track our relative performance across several different data sources. And similar to last quarter, all the metrics we're seeing indicate we continue to grow our share in the third quarter. The first place we focus on is traffic data, which we get through placer.ai. As prices continue to rise across retail, and discretionary budgets get squeezed, we continue to see strong growth in foot traffic and share gains from customers in the top two income quintiles, which are households making more than $100,000 a year. These top quintiles now represent roughly 40% of our sales during the quarter, and we saw traffic from these cohorts grow in the high single digits. We're very happy to see that we continue to drive strong market share growth with this consumer segment, even as we started lapping the double-digit growth we experienced last year in the third quarter. At the same time, we continue to hold share in the middle-income quintile, which includes households making $50,000 to $100,000 a year, which represents roughly 30% of our customers. And finally, we continue to see traffic erosion in the lower-income cohorts that make less than $50,000 a year, but the pace of these declines was less than what we saw in the first half of the year. As this trend has played out over the past year, we have, in effect, started to somewhat derisk our customer base by giving us less exposure to lower-income consumers, who are under the most amount of economic pressure. Another key data source for us is Surcana, which provides market share data on roughly 60 to 70% of the categories we carry. Similar to last quarter, we were pleased to see meaningful share gains across all of our key businesses such as apparel, footwear, sporting goods, outdoor cooking, fishing, and camping. Finally, we use government background checks for firearms purchases or NICS checks data as a proxy for firearms market share. Once again, we saw continued solid growth on this front, despite the softness in the ammo that I started earlier, with firearm share growing for over eighteen consecutive months. As we move forward into Q4, we expect these trends to continue as customers discover the value, convenience, and diversity of our assortment. We attribute a lot of the momentum we're building in the business to the solid progress we continue to make against our long-term objectives and goals. I will now cover a couple of highlights of this from Q3. First, opening new stores remains our number one strategy. And during the quarter, the team successfully opened up 11 new stores. Unlike the first half of the year, most of these new locations are in our core geography where we have high brand awareness and affinity, and are positioned in mid-sized markets with an underserved constituency. Some examples of stores we've opened up during the quarter are Palestine, Texas, Batesville, Mississippi, and Rome, Georgia. While these towns are not household names for many of you, the customer profile in these markets closely aligns with our target consumer. In each of these stores, with the other eight we opened in the quarter, we've been knocking it out of the park since opening and running significantly ahead of plan. The success of these stores highlights the opportunity we have to open stores in our legacy markets and markets that are experiencing high population migration and growth, in addition to the new states and markets where we currently don't have a presence. At this point in time, we have pretty good visibility into our 2026 pipeline of stores. We're excited to announce that we plan to open up an additional 20 to 25 stores next year, with a focus on opening roughly 80% of the new stores in legacy and existing markets and 20% in newer markets. As in the past, we tend to open new markets in the first part of the year, while legacy and existing are more back-half weighted. Our second initiative is to grow our .com business at an accelerated pace. We continue to make progress against this goal in Q3, growing this channel 22% for the quarter, and penetration to total sales grew over 160 basis points to 10.4%. As we mentioned on our previous calls, we believe that our new store growth is one of the things that helps fuel our .com business by acting as local fulfillment hubs for customers who want the convenience of a BOPIS experience. This symbiotic relationship is evidenced by the fact that we're starting to see higher .com penetrations in our new markets, as we lead with a digital-first customer acquisition strategy. An omnichannel shopper is our most productive and profitable customer, and we're laser-focused on getting new customers into our digital ecosystem, engaging with them in ways that support their shopping needs and patterns. In addition to the contribution that new store growth has had on our .com business, we've also made significant investments in both technology and talent over the past twenty-four months, which has led to the growth we experienced over the last three quarters. We believe that we're still in the early innings of many of these initiatives, and that as we continue to invest and focus on delivering a site experience that is easy, engaging, and elegant, we will remain on track to achieving the 15% penetration we outlined in our long-range plan. Our third growth pillar is improving the productivity of our existing stores. We put several initiatives in place this year to help accomplish this. Our first focus on this front is to continue to refine and expand our assortment by adding the most requested and desirable brands that will inspire existing customers to shop more frequently at Academy while also attracting new customers to our brand. We continue to be pleased with the growth we're getting out of our increased investment in partnership with both Nike and the Jordan brand. At this point, we've expanded elements of the Jordan brand out to all stores, such as cleats, socks, slides, and backpacks, and expect to further roll out footwear and apparel in more stores in 2026. We believe that our improved access to basketball game shoes from Jordan and performance running shoes from Nike, such as the Romero, when coupled with the expansion of fashion apparel across both these brands, is helping us attract many of these new $100,000-plus households that I mentioned earlier in my remarks. We've been applying the same approach broadly across the store to ensure that we have a strong presentation of some of the hottest items in transit holiday. The technology team has made some significant inventory investments in key holiday items that feature enhanced technology, including Turtle Box speakers, Meta AI glasses from Ray-Ban and Oakley. We're also leaning into new emerging health and wellness trends such as weighted vest running and walking, portable saunas from Homedics for post-workout recovery, or an expanded assortment of clear proteins from First Form or Isopure for people taking GLP-1 weight loss drugs. Our core customer is the AlwaysGain family, so we haven't forgotten the kids this holiday either. We have the newly released World Cup Triad of Soccer Ball, along with an expanded assortment of some of the hottest youth baseball drip, from brands such as Bruce Bowl, Baseball 101, and Dirty Mid's. The team has also built a strong assortment of sports toys from Nerf Silent Sports. And lastly, sports and Pokemon trading cards always make great stocking stuffers. Our second focus this year was on delivering new technology to stores, with the rollout of RFID scanners and new handheld devices. We continue to see benefits from these initiatives as we improve our inventory accuracy and in-stocks and brands, we can update inventory on a weekly basis. One of the biggest benefits to date has been the impact on our associates' ability to serve the customer and in many cases, save the sale that would have gone somewhere else. The combined utilization of RFID in these handheld devices allows associates to help customers more rapidly find the items and sizes they're shopping for. When the item is not in stock in a specific store, they can save the sale by allowing the associate to immediately order the item for the customer, and it can be delivered to home or picked up in another store, whichever is most convenient for them. We're also seeing productivity gains from our store teams as they can more quickly process .com and BOPIS orders. Our third focus is on driving traffic through expanding our loyalty program and improving the efficiency of our targeted marketing efforts in order to increase the frequency of customer visits and improve conversion rates. Simplistically, we want to streamline the customer shopping experience and make it easy and intuitive. One recent example is where we've automated much of our customer onboarding experience and improved our ability to offer instantaneous real-time benefits from sign-on offers versus in the past, there being a lag between when the customer signed up for loyalty and when they could use their first purchase discount. All this work continues to help drive customer enrollment and engagement in our My Academy Awards program, which we expect to have 13 million members by the end of the year. Driving enrollment in our rewards program remains an important focus for us so we can start a dialogue with them and convert them from occasional shoppers to loyal customers who shop with us two to three times more in a year than an average customer and spend four to five times more on an annual basis. We expect to see this program continue to grow and be a key traffic and conversion driver for us and are excited about our opportunity in 2026 to combine My Academy Awards and our credit card program into one seamless experience for the customer. We'll share more details around this in our next call. Now I'll hand it over to Carl to give you a deeper dive into the financials.