Thank you, Wayne, and everyone for joining us on our fiscal 2025 first quarter earnings conference call. During today’s conference call, Brad, Bryan and I will discuss some of our fiscal 2025 first quarter earnings highlights. Then Bryan will share our thoughts about fiscal 2025. We are pleased to deliver fiscal 2025 first quarter diluted earnings per share of $0.45, compared to $0.46 per share in the same period last year. This result exceeded the low end of our first quarter earnings expectations, even though comparable store sales were at the lower end of our forecast. Our fiscal year 2025 first quarter total sales increased by 5.8% to $1.161 billion from $1.97 billion in the same period last year. Brad and I have visited many of our stores over the past few months, giving us a great opportunity to see firsthand the dedication and hard work of our associates, who engage with and serve our homeowners and professional customers every day. We could not be more pleased, than our first quarter results demonstrate how effectively they continue executing our growth strategies, achieving record customer satisfaction scores, managing our expenses and profitability, and growing our market share even as sales and the hard surface flooring industry contract. The first quarter results are a testament to how we are focused on what we can control during this uncertain period. As you know, we are operating in an economic environment marked by high volatility, uncertainty, lack of clarity and the tail risk of a recession. While we don't know how this could impact consumer spending for the remainder of fiscal 2025, we have a proactive, flexible plan we are implementing and executing. First, as many of you know, we successfully managed an increase in tariffs back in 2018 and 2019 by pursuing strategies to grow our market share and protect our profitability. Today, we intend to employ similar strategies to achieve these goals in 2025 and beyond. That said, unlike in 2018 and 2019, we believe managing today's tariffs, uncertainty and complexity at scale and speed could be more challenging for some competitors in the hard surface flooring industry. To address this increased complexity, we have organized tariff Steering Committee. This committee will ensure we stay focused on executing our top priorities and remain agile in our operational plans as needed. For instance, following the US announcement of a 90 day pause on all reciprocal tariffs, excluding China, we expedited purchase orders to maximize the likelihood they arrive before the end of the pause on July 9, 2025. This exemplifies how we are executing and will continue to execute at speed and scale. Second, we are actively negotiating and collaborating with our vendors to mitigate the higher incremental tariffs on the products we sell. As we have successfully done with prior tariff increases, we believe we have the strategic option to thoughtfully widen our price gaps further, reinforcing our everyday low price value proposition against independence and to grow our market share. We have already observed some retailers and distributors communicate price increases of high single digits to as much as 50%. Third, we will continue to effectively implement our sourcing diversification strategies to find the highest quality products at the lowest possible price for both our homeowner and professional customers. Our scale and worldwide direct sourcing model, which involves over 240 vendors and 26 countries, provide us with flexibility and a competitive advantage, particularly compared to independent flooring retailers and distributors. Fourth, it is likely that we'll need to raise prices to mitigate some of the incremental tariffs following our negotiations. If we do so, we'll continue to use the balanced portfolio approach to product pricing, ensuring a consistent pricing structure across different product categories, while managing our gross margin rate and profitability. Fifth, customers are asking for products produced in the United States, and we have already taken action to identify American made products in our stores. As we discussed in our fiscal 2024 fourth quarter earnings call, we are proud to report that the United States is now our largest country of manufacture, accounting for approximately 27% of the products we sold in fiscal 2024, up from approximately 20% in fiscal 2018. Turning to China. In fiscal year 2024, China accounted for 18% of the products we sold, declining from approximately 25% in fiscal 2023, and approximately 50% in fiscal 2018. In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024, this figure dropped to approximately 16%. Based on current market conditions and the universal tariffs that are in place, we anticipate our receipts from China to approximate mid to low single digits of our total receipts as we exit fiscal 2025. For instance, in the first quarter of fiscal 2025, we placed our last purchase order from China for laminate and vinyl, our largest product category, successfully diversifying to other countries. Additionally, we paused all purchase orders from China to evaluate the fluid environment and our assortments relative to our competition. While some specific products can only be sourced from China, our industry leading broad assortment and innovation enable us to offer homeowners and professional customer’s alternative options if product costs from China become untenable to US consumers. We believe our size and growth potential position us well to navigate the uncertainty in the market. We are proud to be the second largest retailer of hard surface flooring in the United States. This underscores the strength of our differentiated business model and the effectiveness of our growth strategies. We meticulously pursued since our inception in 2000. Let me turn my comments to new warehouse and store format growth. In the first quarter of fiscal 2025, we opened four new warehouse-format stores, including openings in Venice, Florida; Covington, Louisiana; Tualatin, Oregon; and Gilroy, California. As part of our market optimization efforts, we elected to close our oldest store and smallest store in Austin, Texas as the lease expired. We have been strategically positioning other nearby Floor & Decor stores in Austin to maximize the market potential. We plan to open two new warehouse-format stores in the second quarter of fiscal 2025, including Kissimmee, Florida, which opened in April, and San Antonio, Texas later this month. As we discussed in prior earnings conference calls, if the macroeconomic conditions become less favorable than anticipated, we have the flexibility to lower our annual store opening plan as most openings were slated for the second half of fiscal 2025. With that in mind and the potential for slowing economic growth in the second half of fiscal 2025, we plan to open 20 new warehouse-format stores in fiscal 2025, compared with our prior expectation of 25 warehouse-format stores, mainly across large and mid-size existing markets. We will push the delayed five store openings from fiscal 2025 to our 2026 new warehouse store pipeline. If economic conditions worsen from our current expectations, we have the ability to further reduce fiscal 2025 openings. It is important to note that our company is built for more than 20 new annual warehouse store openings per year when macroeconomic conditions improve. Let me now turn the call over to Brad.