Thank you, Felix. And good morning, everyone. I'll spend the first part of our call this morning reiterating our strategy which we are firmly committed to. After that, I'll provide an overview of the continued progress we've made as evidenced by our second quarter results, along with some perspective on inflationary pressures that are impacting the consumer and our business. I'll then provide an update on our cash creation and capital allocation. Before I start, I'd like to thank all of our teammates in our stores and our store support center for their continued dedication to serving the needs of our customers in our business. As a reminder, regarding our strategy, we are a leader in the highly resilient and largely non-discretionary auto services aftermarket. We have significant scale that gives us important competitive advantages over smaller players in our industry. We leverage our scale and the strength of our financial position to make critical investments in our business. Our people and technologies deliver an outstanding guest experience. For more than a year, we have been actively addressing the staffing needs of our stores. We have built the labor capacity in our stores to meet customer demand. We are now focused on continuously improving our in-store execution, properly training new and existing teammates, and reallocating resources between front of shop and back of shop investments to maximize store productivity. We still have important work to do to achieve the kind of operational excellence that will allow us to consistently deliver on our mid-single digit comp store sales expectations. We are committed to a balanced approach between service and tire categories to drive additional profitability at our locations. We are also continuing to execute on our strategy to improve our underperforming stores, which represent about a quarter of our overall store base. Consistent with last quarter, our second quarter comp store sales increase of approximately 10% for this group of stores shows that this strategy is working. Another important focus of our strategy is cash creation. We are unlocking cash from the business by optimizing inventory and leveraging the strength of our vendor partners for better availability, quality, and cost of parts and tires in our stores. We've made progress against our overall strategy, but we certainly have significant opportunities ahead. Now turning to our second quarter results and how inflationary pressures are impacting the consumer and our business. Our top line does not fully reflect all of our good work and the progress we've made. In the second quarter, our comp store sales grew approximately 1%, with momentum building as the quarter progressed. Comp store sales in our 300 smaller underperforming stores increased approximately 10% in the quarter. As a reminder, comp store sale at these stores decreased by 8% in fiscal 2022 compared to fiscal 2020. The continued acceleration in sales at these 300 stores was a result of improved technician staffing levels and training to meet customer demand. Comp store sales in our remaining stores were approximately flat. Last quarter, we spoke about how broad based inflationary pressures impacted demand for tires as consumers began to defer some of their tire purchases. Our partnership with ATD allowed us to reposition our tire assortment to give our customers the right tire at the right price. We are staying relevant on opening price points to provide customers with more choice and greater value as they appear to be trading down to lower priced options. Based on third-party syndicated US replacement tire data, this contributed to our outperformance entire units versus the industry in the second quarter. In the second quarter, we also saw a stretched consumers make decisions to defer vehicle maintenance in some of our key service categories. As a result, we made an intentional decision to hold tight on prices in these categories. Our gross margin was impacted by inflationary cost pressures that we chose not to offset through additional increases in price to an already stretched consumer. Raising prices at a time when a consumer struggling to accept them would likely result in the immediate loss of the sale and has the potential to jeopardize a longer term relationship with a customer, and developing this longer term relationship with our customer is a key element to our strategy. Although our investments in price and labor impacted our gross margin in the second quarter, our business is well positioned with the right strategy in place to take advantage of longer term industry tailwinds. We are not going to cut our critical investments we've made in our labor force and sacrifice our long term service model for short term profitability. The data shows that we are gaining market share in our tire category in a challenging macro environment, focused on driving traffic to our stores and serving the car care needs of our customers. Although nobody has a crystal ball regarding the length or depth of the macro challenges, we can look to the economic downturn of 2008 for insight as to how our business may perform. Similar to the 2008 downturn, average vehicle age is increasing. This is currently due to a low new car availability and high vehicle prices. Vehicle miles driven have recovered to pre pandemic levels and are now stable, which is similar to what was experienced in 2008. A point of contrast is that, subsequent to 2008, there was a significant spike in unemployment, whereas a significant spike in inflation has occurred in the current downturn, with current unemployment remaining at historically low levels. Both unemployment and inflation put pressure on the consumer and lead to a deferral cycle as the consumer puts off needed work. The largely non-discretionary nature of our business gives us confidence that as long as our stores are properly staffed, our pricing is competitive with the right assortment, and we continue to improve our in-store execution, we'll be able to capture market share gains. This is clearly evidenced by our strong comp store sales performance during the fiscal 2009 to fiscal 2011, with average growth of approximately 6% over this three-year period. We are seeing positive signs that the consumer deferral cycle might be coming to an end. This is supported by strong performance in our tire category as well as improving trends in our service categories. In the second quarter, we saw a strengthening sequential demand that continued into fiscal October, with our preliminary comp store sales up almost 4%. That being said, we're closely monitoring all aspects of our business, as the uncertainties of the macro environment could impact consumer demand in ways we may not anticipate. Lastly, an update on our cash creation and capital allocation. Our strong financial position and cash flow is a competitive advantage, which enables us to make investments in labor and price to grow market share and capture new customers for the long term. We continue to generate strong operating cash flow in the second quarter led by reductions in our working capital. The proceeds from our completed wholesale and tire distribution asset divestiture, excess cash being generated by our operations and strength of our balance sheet also allowed us to continue returning capital to our shareholders at the same time as we pursue our growth strategy. During the second quarter, we continued our long standing policy of sharing our results with our shareholders through our dividend and we continue deploying cash on our share repurchase program, which authorizes us to repurchase up to $150 million of the company's common stock. As part of our growth strategy, we continue to carefully review value enhancing acquisitions, while maintaining our disciplined approach in evaluating multiples. We have significant capacity to acquire businesses, which fit into our overall strategic plan. In summary, as we continue to navigate an uncertain macroenvironment, we have the right strategy in place to take advantage of longer term industry tailwinds. We will continue leveraging our scale as a key competitive advantage. We are focused on gaining market share and driving traffic to our stores and our in-store execution is firmly in our control and remains our greatest opportunity for improving our results. Our staffing initiatives and focus on our small or underperforming stores continue to deliver comp store sales growth in the second quarter. As our training and productivity initiatives continue to take hold, we expect to deliver improvements in sales and earnings. Significant cash flow generation through operational improvements and working capital reductions will allow us to continue returning capital to shareholders through healthy dividend and share repurchase programs as well as capitalize on acquisitions. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Brian who will provide an overview of Monro's second quarter performance, strong financial position, and additional color regarding fiscal 2023. Brian?