Thanks, Andy. Total reported revenue for the quarter was $1,281 million. We reported a net income attributable to common shareholders of $1 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter totaled $251 million. Our weighted-average share count was 387 million shares during Q1 and we exited the quarter with 386 million shares outstanding. During the first-quarter, we generated $51 million of adjusted free cash flow. We saw a working capital headwind of roughly $37 million in the first quarter, which is typical of our business in the first-half as we come out of the fourth quarter slowdown. We expect working capital will be a tailwind in the second-half of the year. During the first quarter, we returned $51 million to shareholders, including an $0.08 per share dividend and $20 million for share repurchases. Over the 18 months from September 30, 2023, which was the first reporting period following the close of the NexTier merger and Ulterra acquisition, through March 31, 2025, we have used approximately $387 million to repurchase shares and we have reduced our share count by 8% since we closed those transactions. This is in addition to reducing net-debt, including leases by over $200 million since that time and paying a dividend that is currently an annualized 5% of our share price. In our Drilling Services segment, first quarter revenue was $413 million and adjusted gross profit totaled $165 million. In U.S. contract drilling, we totaled 9,573 operating days. Average rig revenue per day was $35,700 with an average rig operating cost per day of $19,600. The average adjusted rig gross profit per day was $16,200. On March 31, we had term contracts for drilling rigs in the U.S. providing for approximately $407 million of future day rate drilling revenue. Based on contracts currently in place, we expect an average of 62 rigs operating under term contracts during the second quarter of 2025 and an average of 35 rigs operating under term contracts over the four quarters ending March 31, 2026. In our other Drilling Services businesses, which is mostly international contract drilling and directional drilling, first quarter revenue was $71 million with an adjusted gross profit of $10 million. Our U.S. contract drilling business is the majority of our Drilling Services segment and historically, we have disclosed revenue per day and adjusted gross profit per day specific to this business line. Moving forward, while we continue to report U.S. contract drilling operating days, we will no longer report revenue per day or adjusted gross profit per day. As we further integrate our drilling operations and shift more towards performance-based agreements, we no longer plan to isolate and report individual components of the segment. Instead, we will focus on providing details at the segment level to better reflect the integrated nature of our operations. For the second quarter, in Drilling services, we expect a relatively steady rig count compared to the first quarter. We expect adjusted gross profit to decline slightly with the sequential change driven by a reduction in average contracted revenue as legacy contracts roll as well as some normal seasonal increase in costs. Revenue for the first quarter in our Completion Services segment totaled $766 million, with an adjusted gross profit of $108 million. Activity increased from the fourth quarter slowdown and we saw strong demand and high utilization with increased activity sequentially in both oil and natural gas basins. Average pricing was down compared to the fourth quarter, although we partially offset lower pricing with some cost reduction initiatives. Pricing was mostly steady throughout the quarter and we exited the quarter with roughly the same pricing as we entered. For the second quarter, we expect Completion Services adjusted gross profit to decline slightly sequentially. Currently, activity levels are steady compared to where we exited the first quarter, and we have not seen any change in strategy from our customers. However, if oil prices remain near current levels, we could see some white space later in the quarter. First quarter Drilling Products revenue totaled $86 million with an adjusted gross profit of $39 million. Drilling Products revenue was relatively steady in all major geographic regions compared to the fourth quarter. Segment adjusted gross profit improved on lower operating costs which was driven by operational efficiencies. For the second quarter, we expect Drilling Products adjusted gross profit to be relatively steady sequentially with steady results in the U.S. We expect normal seasonal activity declines from Canadian spring breakup to be mostly offset by increase in international on a sequential basis. Other revenue totaled $16 million for the quarter with $7 million in adjusted gross profit. Subsequent to the close of the first quarter, we absorbed a portion of the assets of our Great Plains Oilfield Rental business into our other business units and divested the remainder of the business. Great Plains comprised roughly two-thirds of the revenue and adjusted gross profit in our other businesses line items on our income statement. As a result, we expect other adjusted gross profit in the second quarter to decline proportionally as compared to what we reported in the first quarter. Reported selling, general and administrative expenses in the first quarter were $67 million. For Q2, we expect SG&A expenses of approximately $65 million. On a consolidated basis for the first quarter, total depreciation, depletion, amortization and impairment expense totaled $232 million. For the second quarter, we expect total depreciation, depletion, amortization and impairment expense of approximately $230 million. During Q1, total capex was $162 million, including $73 million in Drilling Services, $62 million in Completion Services, $18 million in Drilling Products and $8 million in other and corporate. As a reminder, our full year 2025 net capital budget was set at approximately $600 million. Based on what we see today, with our activity levels steady into the second quarter, we are not revisiting our budget. However, we also feel it is important to point out the flexibility we showed last year in adjusting our budget to changes in our outlook. The lion's share of our CapEx budget is for maintenance and repair of our equipment and if for some reason the activity outlook changes from our base case, we have the flexibility to decrease our budget just as we have done in the past. We closed Q1 with $225 million in cash on hand. We do not have any senior note maturities until 2028. We do not have anything drawn on our $500 million revolving credit facility. We still expect to generate significant free cash flow again in 2025 and we again expect to return at least half of our adjusted free cash flow to investors through share buybacks and dividends. Free cash flow is likely to be weighted to the second-half as working capital needs decrease. Our Board has approved an $0.08 per share dividend for the second-quarter of 2025 payable on June 16 to holders of record as of June 2. I'll now turn it back to Andy Hendricks for closing remarks.