Thanks. As Mark said, it was a record quarter and record year for DiamondRock. Total comparable revenues for the company were $257 million in the quarter, an increase of $47 million or nearly 23% over the comparable period in 2021. Comparable RevPAR for the portfolio in the fourth quarter was $196 or 6.7% higher than 2019. This growth was driven by room rates over 19% above 2019, occupancy is down 780 basis points to 2019. Closing this gap remains one of several sources of future growth. Other revenue, which speaks directly to our asset management team's creativity in identifying and expanding new income streams was up 31% or $5.1 million over 2019. F&B revenue was over $5.2 million above 2019, driven by the repositioning of several F&B outlets during the pandemic. We will share with you soon several new or upgraded outlets we are working on for 2023 and beyond, that will continue to drive profits to new levels. Comparable hotel adjusted EBITDA was $77 million, which beats fourth quarter 2019 by $11.2 million or 17%. Comparable hotel adjusted EBITDA margins were 30%, up 724 basis points over 2021 and 192 basis points to 2019. Adjusted EBITDA was $67.4 million, nearly $5 million over fourth quarter 2019. And finally, FFO per share was $0.23 or 85% of the fourth quarter of 2019. Demand across the portfolio remained robust in the fourth quarter, but was specifically the demand at our urban hotels that surpassed our expectations in the fourth quarter as it has throughout 2022. Recall that at the end of the third quarter, we expected our RevPAR in our urban hotels to finish at 80% to 85% of 2019 levels. Short-term group and business transient demand, however, drove urban RevPAR to 97.5% of 2019, outperforming our forecast. Short-term group in business transient continue to improve and we still have significant room for further gains as the citywide calendar across our footprint is stronger in 2023 and 2024 than it was in 2022. Resort portfolio -- resort performance remained strong with total RevPAR up nearly 29% over the same period in 2019, driven by a greater than 40% increase in room rates. It is important to note that Q4 occupancy was still 8 percentage points behind 2019, which means we have room to run in 2023 and 2024 at our resorts. Our fourth quarter resort profit -- resort profit margins were 341 basis points above 2019. We are confident resorts will hold on the premium performance going forward because of the strong secular demand for experiential travel and high barriers to new competitive supply. So let's talk about the demand segments. Leisure revenues were great, up 26% in the quarter compared to 2019 on a 29% increase in average daily rates. The resort markets had some variations. We expect healthy growth this season in markets like Vail and Huntington Beach. Additionally, group oriented resorts like our Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort can mix shift, group up, and lock in performance. Key West continues to show strong growth in peak demand, we expect giving back a little occupancy relative to 2021 in the lower demand shoulder periods. Nevertheless, Key West remains at dramatically higher performance levels than in 2019 with great flow-through and incredible profit margins. BT is probably the most interesting story. Business transient revenues were $47 million in the quarter, that's up 22% over the fourth quarter of 2021, driven by nearly 32% increase in average daily rate. Fourth quarter BT revenues were nearly 90% of the same period in 2019, but on a -- but on 21% higher room rates. We believe BT will continue to be a significant source of growth for DiamondRock. BT was over 25% of rooms sold in Q4 2022 versus 34% of rooms sold in Q4 2019. In full-year 2021, BT revenues were roughly 50% of 2019 levels, and in 2022, BT revenues were 77% of 2019. So, no matter how you look at the data, there is significant room for continued growth from the burgeoning return of corporate travel. Group demand was strong in the quarter. Fourth quarter group revenues were nearly 103% of the same period in 2019, an acceleration from 91% of 2019 for full year 2022. The group room rate was up nearly 13% in the quarter, an improvement from 10% growth in full year 2022. Banquet revenue is at nearly 99% of 2019 levels and the quality of our group is improving, and we expect total group spend to accelerate as we move through 2023 and 2024. When groups come and they are coming, they are spending significantly outside the room. We have a terrific setup for 2023 and beyond. Citywide calendars in our core markets are already in line or ahead of total room production in 2022, pointing to a stronger base of business in the market. Boston, Phoenix, Washington D.C., Chicago, and San Diego are all well positioned. Specific to our hotels, there are over 450,000 group room nights on the books at the start of this year with an expected total production of nearly 740,000 room nights budgeted for 2023. This compares to approximately 540,000 room nights on the books at the start of 2019 and final total production of 782,000 room nights in 2019. Given the increased availability in our calendar and a strong citywide calendar, we expect to see outsized growth in short term in the year for the year Group sales, just as we saw throughout 2022. Switching gears, we continue to be excited by the growth of our -- of our ROI Projects. We upgraded four hotels in the past two years, including The Hythe Vail, The Lodge in Sonoma, Margaritaville in Key West, and the Clio in Cherry Creek. Collectively these four hotels are producing $15.5 million more profit than they did in 2019. This is a 56% increase in hotel adjusted EBITDA and 50% ahead of initial underwriting. This year, we will convert the Hilton Burlington to the Lifestyle Curio Collection. This will involve completely reimagining the arrival and lobby experiences, as well as adding a new restaurant overseen by a local James Beard award-winning chef. In Boston, a major repositioning of the Hilton is underway and later this year we will unveil the most exciting lifestyle hotel in downtown, serving both Faneuil Hall leisure and financial district business travelers. There is more to come down the road. Franchise agreements at our Courtyard Denver Downtown and Westin Boston Seaport expire in the next few years and we'll present value creation opportunities. An exciting transformation involves the opportunity to reinvent the Orchards Inn in Sedona. Last year, the Orchards ran at $700 night discount to our adjacent L’Auberge de Sedona Resort and the Orchards has unparalleled panoramic views of Sedona's red rock formations. So our plan is to reposition that hotel to capture much of that rate differential. We will have more to share as our master plan develops. We have been active acquirers in the past 18 months and performance of our new hotels have been strong. Our two resorts in Destin collectively generated NOI of over $10 million in full-year 2022, exceeding initial underwriting by 15%. In Marathon, EBITDA at the tranquility BAY Resort was ahead of initial underwriting by 51% or $2.7 million, in fact, tranquility yielded 12.5% on its purchase price in its first year. The Bourbon in New Orleans is right in line with pro forma expectations and just like the Shorebreak in Fort Lauderdale, executing on our three year business plan to enhance from positioning to achieve new levels of profitability. Lake Austin, which Mark spoke about was acquired in late November and still manage to surpass the initial underwriting in the final weeks of 2022. Switching briefly to ESG matters. We are proud to be named the hotel sector leader in the Americas by GRESB for the third consecutive year. We introduced new environmental and social targets for 2030, as well as our goal to become a net zero company by 2050. This and much more can be found in our 2022 Corporate Responsibility Report we published to our website in December. As Mark mentioned earlier, we recast and expanded our credit facility in 2022. We have nearly $600 million of total liquidity between our cash on hand in our undrawn revolver, which is fully available to us. During the quarter, we placed $150 million, I’d say, during the first quarter, we placed $150 million of incremental interest rate swaps. As of this moment, 68% of our total debt and preferred capital is either fixed or swapped. The most effective way to manage interest rate exposure is, of course, to maintain low leverage from the start. And on this point, we concluded 2022 with net debt to EBITDA of 4 times and a weighted average debt maturity of 3.7 years. We have no material near-term debt maturities and 31 of our 35 assets are unencumbered by debt. Moreover, we have no significant deferred maintenance, which can be a hidden pressure on the true investment capacity and leverage of the company. These qualities put DiamondRock in a unique position, particularly for a company our size to be opportunistic on capital allocation, whether that is taking advantage of pricing dislocation of our common or preferred securities, pursuing value-added ROI projects are capitalizing upon opportunities in real estate markets. We continue to review accretive recycling opportunities within our portfolio, but we are being prudent to maximize shareholder value. On that note, I will turn the floor back to Mark.