Thanks, Derek, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us for Accel's third quarter earnings call. We had another strong quarter. We reported revenue of $302 million and adjusted EBITDA of $46 million, proof of the resiliency of our convenient local gaming offering. Secondly, we made solid progress in our pending acquisition of Fairmont Park, which is expected to close this quarter. In terms of financial performance, our largest market, Illinois, posted market-wide GGR growth of 5% year-over-year, outperforming Illinois casinos, which were down 1% year-over-year on a comparable basis. We are proud of the strong foundation we have built in our home state, leading in a model that's a win-win-win for our state, our customers and local convenience-based gaming providers like us. We continue to optimize our largest state-based route footprint, managing head count and broader operational excellence to more than offset the modest drag from recent tax increases. During the quarter, our location count was down a bit sequentially. In Illinois, this was due to two factors: First, the strategic closures of 22 underperforming locations. And second, some openings were delayed by the cancellation of the July Illinois Gaming Board meeting. The subsequent IGB meeting was in September and not all locations were live by month end. By the middle of October, the remaining licensed locations were live. Regarding our strategic closures in Illinois, we continue to review our portfolio and look for opportunities to prune. We have identified a subset of our locations within our bottom decile performers that we will phase out over coming quarters. Given we also have an attractive pipeline of planned openings at promising locations, we expect near-term Illinois net unit growth to be flattish with some potential positive impact on EBITDA and returns on invested capital as we rotate locations. Across our footprint, we continue to refine our sales and operating model, focusing on the highest hold-per-day locations. This improvement in the composition of our portfolio will help both top line and bottom line, driven by choiceful segmentation and resource allocation. In Nebraska, we're encouraged that strong revenue growth during the quarter was driven by hold per day. We are seeing fruits of our strategic product shift, swapping in higher-performing games and removing lower performing revenue share units. We see more runway to do this across our fastest-growing market. On the regulatory front, Illinois continues to lay the groundwork for ticket in, ticket out, also known as TITO, which should make cash processing more efficient and more importantly, create a more convenient experience for our players, allowing them to switch between games and our venues without cashing out and cashing in each time, making our sites more akin to a casino experience. We expect TITO to be rolled out in the first half of 2025. We continue to monitor the regulation related to this. Before I turn it over to Mark, I want to take a few minutes to talk about Accel's value proposition and where we see our greatest opportunities for growth. For both our customers and players, we provide a high-quality slot gaming experience at a low price point that can be accessed by our players at a local convenient retail location of their choosing in 15 minutes or less. We support retail gaming partners by providing them with high-margin revenue per square foot gaming products and self-service technology. We instill player loyalty through our rewards programs and create memorable player experiences with our diverse game selection. And finally, we maintain collaborative and reliable partnerships with regulators across 11 different regulatory structures, all while generating attractive returns on capital in the low-teens. In our core route-based business model, our steady-state growth algorithm is both simple and compelling. We target low single-digit revenue growth, mid-single-digit EBITDA growth, high single-digit free cash flow growth and core business CapEx quickly compressing down towards $40 million. Looking ahead, the primary levers for growth in our core route business are: one, growing organically in Illinois, Nebraska and Georgia through both newly licensed establishments and converting competitor locations; two, driving profitability in Nebraska and Georgia through operational execution and strategically positioning ourselves in the face of favorable legislation; three, collecting a greater share of location economics through selectively owning establishments in markets where this is permitted and is otherwise profitable; and four, preparing ourselves for future opportunities in new states likely to legalize local gaming in the future. Outside of our core business, our M&A pipeline remains active as demonstrated by the Fairmont announcement. We also expect to provide an update on Louisiana before year-end. We are confident that we can leverage our proven capabilities as a local gaming operator to convert opportunities in the attractive and sizable nationwide $15 billion GGR local gaming market. Most assets in this market are unconsolidated and sit at EBITDA levels that are below the radar of the larger gaming companies, conditions that play to our strength. As a prime example of these opportunities, I'm going to turn it over to Mark.