Thank you, Andrew, and good morning, everyone. During 2025, we made significant progress against several strategic initiatives that I am confident will lay the groundwork for sustainable long-term growth. Looking back, we took several decisive actions to build upon our already strong foundation. These actions included: one, recalibrating our promotional activity in Crocs brand DTC channels; two, managing sell-in across wholesale for the Crocs brand; for HeyDude, three, reducing unproductive performance marketing spend; and four, accelerating wholesale cleanup actions. In addition, we effectively executed our $50,000,000 cost savings program and actioned $100,000,000 of additional cost savings for 2026 as we previously communicated. Now, let us dig into our results. For the full year, enterprise revenue of just over $4,000,000,000 was down approximately 2% to prior year. Crocs brand revenue of $3,300,000,000 was up 1% to prior year driven by DTC up 3%, partially offset by wholesale, which was down 1%. Growth was driven by units up 2% to prior year to a total of 129,000,000 pairs sold, while brand ASPs were roughly flat to prior year. North America was down 7% to prior year at $1,700,000,000. This was tied to both the decision to pull back on promotional activity in our DTC channels earlier in the year as well as carefully managing our sell-in to the North American market. For North America, DTC and wholesale were 41% and 59% respectively, as we work to better manage channel sell-in. To reiterate Andrew’s comments, expansion in international markets is one of our key strategic pillars, and we are pleased to report another year of double-digit growth. Revenue was up 11% versus prior year to $1,600,000,000 led by DTC up 23% and wholesale up 5%. We gained market share in China, which grew revenues by 30% to last year with balanced growth across partner, comparable store sales, digital, and new store openings. Importantly, we also saw another year of double-digit growth in Western Europe while Japan returned to growth. Turning to HeyDude, during the year we took aggressive actions to stabilize the brand in North America. As such, revenue was $715,000,000, down 14% from prior year. DTC revenues were up 3% supported by strength in digital marketplaces and the addition of 23 new retail stores, offset in part by the impact of lower performance marketing spend. Wholesale revenues were down 27% as we accelerated our cleanup actions and more aggressively managed sell-in. For the year, ASPs were up 4% to just under $32 while unit volume was 22,000,000 pairs, down 17% to prior year. Now, switching to the fourth quarter, we delivered enterprise revenue of approximately $958,000,000, down 4% to prior year and a three percentage point improvement from the third quarter. This performance was fueled by both brands, particularly during the holiday season in North America. Crocs brand revenue of $768,000,000 was up slightly on a reported basis, led by 11% international revenue growth supported by strength in China, Japan, Western Europe, and India. The HeyDude brand delivered revenue of $189,000,000, which was down 18% to prior year. For HeyDude, DTC was roughly flat to prior year and wholesale was down 42% in part driven by the planned cleanup actions we took in the quarter. I will now move to adjusted gross margin. For the year, enterprise adjusted gross margin was 58.3%, down 50 basis points from last year. This was primarily driven by a 130 basis point tariff headwind. The overall decrease in gross margin was offset in part by lower negotiated sourcing costs. Crocs brand adjusted gross margin was 61.3%, down 30 basis points from prior year, while HeyDude brand gross margin was 44.8%, down 290 basis points. Moving to fourth quarter, enterprise adjusted gross margin of 54.7% was down 320 basis points to prior year driven by a 300 basis point tariff headwind. Crocs brand adjusted gross margin was 57.8% and HeyDude branded adjusted gross margin was 39.7%. For the year, adjusted SG&A dollars increased 7% to prior year, largely tied to 2024 investments in talent, marketing, and DTC which anniversaried into 2025. In the fourth quarter, SG&A dollars were down to prior year, reflecting the benefits of our $50,000,000 cost savings program. Full year adjusted operating margin of 22.3% was down 330 basis points from prior year. In the fourth quarter, adjusted operating margin of 16.8% was down 340 basis points from prior year, excluding approximately $14,000,000 of specific discrete costs primarily associated with a recent reduction in force. Full year adjusted diluted earnings per share of $12.51 decreased 5% to prior year and our non-GAAP effective tax rate was 17%. Now turning to a discussion of the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the year in a strong liquidity position with $130,000,000 cash and cash equivalents and over $900,000,000 of borrowing capacity on our revolver. Our inventory balance as of December 31 was $369,000,000, an increase of 4% versus prior year on a dollar basis, including the impact of higher tariffs and product mix. It is important to note that inventory units were down high single digits to prior year, reflecting our actions to manage inventory flow into the marketplace. Enterprise inventory turns were above our goal of four on an annualized basis, reflecting the continued competitive strength of our business model. In 2025, we generated free cash flow of $659,000,000 which enabled us to repurchase 6,500,000 shares for a total of $577,000,000, ending the year with $747,000,000 remaining on our existing share repurchase authorization. We also repaid $128,000,000 of debt, which puts us at the low end of our net leverage target range of 1.0x to 1.5x. Specifically in the fourth quarter, we repurchased 2,200,000 shares of our common stock for a total of $180,000,000 at an average cost of approximately $84 per share. Before turning to guidance, I wanted to provide an update on our cost savings initiatives for 2026. As we previously communicated, we have identified $100,000,000 of cost savings, which include organizational simplification, deliberately reducing spend in non-critical areas, and further optimizing and modernizing our supply chain. We expect these savings to be relatively balanced between our cost of goods sold and SG&A. Now moving on to our full year 2026 outlook. For the full year, we expect enterprise revenue growth to be in the range of up slightly to down 1% on a reported basis, assuming currency rates as of February 9. As you think about the shape of the year, I want to remind you all that the accelerated strategic actions we took in 2025 were largely second half weighted and as such will continue to have an outsized impact on the first half of the year. Said another way, we expect our year-over-year enterprise revenue growth on a reported basis in the second half to outpace the first half. For the Crocs brand, we expect revenue on a reported basis to be flat to up 2% led by approximately 10% international growth, offset by declines in North America as we anniversary the strategic actions we took in 2025. We anticipate the year-over-year revenue rate in North America to improve slightly from 2025 run rate, as our guidance anticipates that the DTC channel outperforms the wholesale channel. For HeyDude, we expect revenue on a reported basis to be down approximately 7% to 9%. We expect the HeyDude brand to return to growth in 2026 as we anniversary the impact from the strategic actions we took that started in 2025, primarily in the second half. DTC is expected to outperform the wholesale channel and improve throughout the year. We expect adjusted gross margin for the year to be up slightly to prior year despite an anticipated approximately 80 basis points of incremental tariff pressure for the full year. Based on current tariff rates and sourcing mix, we now see an unmitigated tariff headwind of approximately $80,000,000 on an annualized basis, which is down from our previously provided figure of $90,000,000. We believe our diversified sourcing mix and nimble supply chain position us well as we enter 2026. Adjusted SG&A dollars are anticipated to be roughly flat to prior year as we recognize the benefits of our previously announced cost savings programs, offset by investment in the direct-to-consumer channel. Taken together, we expect adjusted operating margin to expand modestly from the 22.3% level in 2025. This excludes approximately $25,000,000 of specific discrete costs related to the implementation of our cost savings initiatives. We expect the underlying non-GAAP effective tax rate, which approximates cash taxes paid, to be 18% and the GAAP effective tax rate to be 23%. We expect our adjusted diluted earnings per share to be in the range of $12.88 to $13.35. Consistent with our previous guidance philosophy, this range reflects future debt repayment but does not assume the impact from potential future share repurchases. We are committed to maintaining net leverage in the range of 1.0x to 1.5x while deploying excess cash flow towards opportunistically buying back shares. For the year, we are planning capital expenditures to be in the range of $70,000,000 to $80,000,000. Now moving on to Q1. For the first quarter, we expect revenues to be down 3.5% to 5.5% at currency rates as of February 9. Crocs brand revenues are expected to be down low single digits. We expect growth to be led by international with the quarterly growth rate modestly below our full year run rate. For HeyDude, we expect revenue to be in the range of down 15% to 18%. Given the dynamics I spoke to earlier, the percentage decline for HeyDude’s first half revenue is anticipated to be similar for the first quarter. Adjusted operating margin is expected to be approximately 21.5%. In the first quarter, we anticipate adjusted gross margin to be flat despite the continued impact of incremental tariffs. Given the visibility we have today, our Q1 incremental tariff headwind is estimated to be approximately 100 basis points, while the Q2 headwind is expected to be closer to 200 basis points. Adjusted diluted earnings per share is planned in the range of $2.67 to $2.77. Before we move to the question and answer portion of our call, I wanted to close by reiterating our confidence heading into 2026. We are already seeing positive signs as we continue to execute on the fundamental strategic pillars for both Crocs and HeyDude. In summary, we are doing what we have said we will do. We are managing our brands for the long term. As Andrew mentioned, while we have accomplished much in the first 20 years as a public company, we are even more excited about what the future holds. At this time, Andrew and I are happy to take your questions. Operator?