Dan, I'm excited for you and Dycom as you lead our company to a bright future. Before I review our results and industry opportunities, I would like to thank my fellow employees for their hard work and dedication. Your efforts make Dycom the special place it is. To our Directors, thanks for your wisdom, guidance and oversight. I finished my time as CEO a much better leader because of you. And finally, to my fellow shareholders, your support as I have led our company has been invaluable. Thanks for the opportunity to benefit from your counsel and the market's discipline. November's earnings call will be my last, for purposes of this call, I will be handling the Q&A. Now moving to Slide 4, a review of our second quarter results. As we review our results, please note that in our comments today and in the accompanying slides, we reference certain non-GAAP measures. We refer you to Slides 15 through 20 for a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to their corresponding GAAP measures. Now for the quarter. Revenue increased year-over-year to $1.203 billion, an increase of 15.5%. Organic revenue increased 9.2%. As we deployed gigabit wireline networks, wireless/wireline converged networks and wireless networks this quarter reflected an increase in demand from three of our top five customers. Gross margin was 20.8% of revenue and increased 52 basis points compared to the second quarter of fiscal 2024. General and administrative expenses were 8.3% of revenue and all of these factors produced adjusted EBITDA of $158.3 million or 13.2% of revenue and adjusted earnings per share of $2.46. Liquidity was strong at $622 million. Now going to Slide 5. In August, subsequent to the end of our second quarter, we completed the acquisition of Black & Veatch's public carrier wireless telecommunications infrastructure business for $150 million. This business provides wireless construction services primarily in the states of New York, New Jersey, Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho and Montana and is our largest ever wireless services acquisition. It strategically expands our geographic presence enabling us to more broadly address growth opportunities in wireless network modernization, including Open RAN transformation initiatives and deployment services. During our third and fourth quarter of fiscal '25, we expect modest revenues as the business is currently focused on site acquisition for next year's construction program. For fiscal year '26, we anticipate this acquisition to contribute $250 million to $275 million of revenue with post-integration EBITDA margins in line with our consolidated average. Finally, while our review of acquired backlog is still preliminary, we currently expect this acquisition to add approximately $1 billion of total backlog, which we will reflect in our third quarter report. Now moving to Slide 6. Today, an increasing number of diverse industry participants are constructing or upgrading wireline networks throughout the country. These wireline networks enable the delivery of gigabit network speeds to consumers and businesses. In addition, the advent of AI data centers has sparked interest in broad new national deployments of high-capacity, low-latency, intercity networks as well as metro rings. The level of interest in intercity networks is the highest we have seen in the last 25 years. Finally, wireless networks are deploying additional spectrum bands and equipment so as to more broadly and efficiently provision higher broadband services for both fixed and mobile access. Industry participants have stated their belief that a single, high-capacity fiber network can most cost-effectively deliver services to both consumers and businesses, enabling multiple revenue streams from a single investment. Some of these same industry participants who also provide wireless services strongly believe that the ability to provision converged wireline fiber and wireless services creates significant competitive advantages. This belief is evident as some wireless providers have recently invested in new fiber providers while another wireline/wireless provider is deploying fiber networks outside its traditional geographic footprint. These views support our belief that the appetite for massive fiber deployments is irreversible. As a result, we continue to see a meaningfully broader set of opportunities for our industry. We are pleased that a number of our customers have entered into strategic transactions, including refinancings intended to provide the capital necessary for the incremental deployment of fiber to more than 9.5 million homes over the next several years. These individual transactions are currently awaiting regulatory approval, which is currently expected over the next 12 to 18 months. In addition to the incremental private capital associated with these transactions, a wide variety of programs are providing public capital to support broadband deployments. The largest of these programs, the Broadband, Equity, Access, Deployment program or BEAD includes over $40 billion for the construction of rural communications networks in unserved and underserved areas across the country. This represents an unprecedented level of support and meaningfully increases the rural market that we expect will ultimately be addressed. As of early this week, 35 states and territories have completed all 10 approval steps as required by the NTIA, while 21 others have completed 9 of the 10. To-date, approximately $22 billion or 53% of the program total has received initial proposal approval. We believe the magnitude and importance of BEAD should not be underappreciated as it addresses some of the most difficult and expensive locations to deploy in America and represents a generational deployment opportunity. For planning purposes, we currently expect to see BEAD opportunities during the third quarter of calendar year 2025. As BEAD continues to develop, we are also seeing significant deployment activity funded by other state and federal programs. Macroeconomic conditions appear stable. In addition, the market for labor has improved in many regions around the country. Automotive and equipment supply chains have normalized and prices for capital equipment have been stable since the first of the year. Within this context, we remain confident that our scale and financial strength position us well to deliver valuable service to our customers. Moving to Slide 7. During the quarter, revenue increased 15.5%. Our top five customers combined produced 54.9% of revenue, increasing 7.1% organically. Demand increased from three of our top five customers, all other customers increased 12.3% organically. AT&T was our largest customer at 17.5% of revenue or $210.2 million. AT&T grew organically 20.6%, its first quarter of organic growth since the January of 2023 quarter. Lumen was our second largest customer, 13.6% of total revenue or $163.7 million. Lumen grew organically 1%. Revenue from Comcast was $105.6 million or 8.8% of revenue. Comcast was Dycom's third largest customer. The customer who asked that we not identify them was our fourth largest customer at $95.8 million or 8% of revenue. This customer grew 73.2% organically. And finally, Verizon was our fifth largest customer at $85.3 million or 7.1% of revenue. This is the 22nd consecutive quarter where all of our other customers in aggregate, excluding the top five customers have grown organically. Of note, fiber construction revenue from electric utilities was $88.7 million in the quarter. We have extended our geographic reach and expanded our program management and network planning services. In fact, over the last several years, we believe we have meaningfully increased the long-term value of our maintenance and operations business, a trend which we believe will parallel our deployment of gigabit wireline direct and wireless/wireline converged networks as those deployments dramatically increase the amount of outside plant network that must be extended and maintained. Now going to Slide 8. Backlog at the end of the second quarter was $6.834 billion versus $6.364 billion at the end of the April 2024 quarter, an increase of $470 million. Of this backlog, approximately $3.83 billion is expected to be completed in the next 12 months. Backlog activity during the second quarter reflects solid performance as we booked new work and renewed existing work. We continue to anticipate substantial future opportunities across a broad array of our customers, including those who have recently entered into strategic transactions and partnerships. During the quarter, we received from Verizon a construction agreement in New York, for Brightspeed, a construction agreement in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia and North Carolina, from Comcast, a nationwide maintenance and construction agreement, for AT&T, a utility line locating agreement in California and various rural fiber construction agreements in Arizona, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Alabama and North Carolina. Headcount was 15,901. Now, I will turn the call over to Drew for his financial review and outlook.