Thanks, Sondra and good morning everyone. As always, we appreciate your interest in Acushnet Holdings. I am pleased to report on a solid start to the year for Acushnet led by momentum and our Titleist Golf Equipment and Golf Gear Segments. For the quarter, Acushnet delivered worldwide net sales of $703 million, a 1% increase over last year. Adjusted IBITDA was $139 million which reflects a decrease of $15 million related to our decision to step up investment in our equipment segment in 2025. Getting to our segment results, you see golf equipment net sales increased almost 4% in the quarter with gains in every region. This growth was led by the successful launch of new Pro V1 and Pro V1X golf ball models and continued momentum across our Titleist GT Metals franchise which was expanded in Q1 with the launch of new hybrids and GT1 metals. The Titleist Golf Ball business grew 4% with gains led by the EMEA region, which was up double digits as favorable weather contributed to an early start to their golf season. And for context, golf ball revenues were up 11% on a reported basis versus two years ago our most recent Pro-V1 launch quarter. Our Titleist Golf Club business grew 4% versus last year and 15%, on a reported basis when compared to the similar product launch cycle in Q1 2023. In most cases, we would expect Q1 club sales to be down in an odd year given the challenging comp against even year Vokey wedges launches. This was obviously not the case in 2025 as GT Metals and Scotty Cameron putters contributed to our growth over last year. Acushnet Gear sales were up almost 4% in the quarter with growth in all major markets led by EMEA and Japan. Titleist Gear posted steady gains, while the combined Club Glove and Links & Kings business was up double digits. Gear margin NOI trends were also favorable as our team is doing good work generating operating leverage across the segment. FootJoy sales were down 5% in the quarter, which is attributable to lower closeout footwear sales and some targeted product line rationalization across the brand. We are pleased with the initial responses to new HyperFlex, Premier and Quantum footwear models and FootJoy gloves, the global category leader, also had a nice start in the quarter. As noted on our last call, we characterized 2025 as a year of stability and improving profitability for FootJoy with a higher percentage of premium sales as we exit what has been a two-year period of correction in the global footwear space. Finally, net sales of products not allocated to a reportable segment were down slightly in the quarter. Shoes again posted nice gains, which were offset by a decline in Titleist apparel as Korea's super premium apparel segment continues to correct after a period of outsized growth. Now looking at the quarter by region, you see the US market was up 1%. EMEA grew 4% with gains from all segments, and Japan and Korea were off 2% and 4%, respectively. Common themes in the quarter with our Asia business are growth in Titleist equipment and gear and declines in FootJoy and Titleist apparel. The season started slowly in Japan and Korea due to poor weather, but we have seen improved conditions in March and April. With a solid first quarter in the books, we are now focused on executing a full slate of ball, club and footwear fitting events across all markets. Despite poor weather and a slow start in the US where rounds were off 2%, we project that total worldwide rounds of play were up slightly for the quarter, led by a nice start in EMEA and the UK, up 15%. I will now comment on how the changing tariff landscape is impacting Acushnet and some of the steps we are taking across the organization to mitigate these new costs. As we have noted in recent years, the company's supply chain is durable and regionally diverse, which provides our teams a good amount of operational flexibility to adapt to an uncertain and evolving tariff dynamic. Our vertical integration in golf balls, golf clubs, footwear and golf gloves, first and foremost, supports our efforts to achieve the highest quality standards in the products we produce. It also provides a good amount of control and agility as it relates to demand planning and global supply chain management. Roughly two-thirds of our worldwide golf ball output is produced in the United States, and our two Massachusetts-based ball plants supply the majority of our US golf ball demand. Our Thailand plant supplies Pro V1 models to all other regions, now including Canada. Our golf ball business has a small exposure to tariffs from China sourced raw materials, which we expect to mitigate by the end of the year. Additionally, we ship US produced performance model golf balls into Canada and Mexico which are presently incurring a 25% tariff. We have not yet reacted to this temporary rate. However, if this becomes permanent we will likely take pricing measures. Club components are sourced from China, Taiwan, Vietnam and the US and we operate our own assembly centers in most major regions. All of our US club demand is assembled in our Carlsbad, California facility. Our primary golf club tariff exposure today is from China sourced clubheads shipped into the US. Over time we will reroute these heads to our international facilities and supply our US production center with components sourced from the US, Taiwan and Vietnam. As you know, we recently relocated our footwear manufacturing center from China to Vietnam. While we are confident this move has a long-term benefit FootJoy like most footwear companies is exposed to tariff uncertainty in Vietnam which was originally posted at 46%, but is now at 10% during the current pause period. And finally the company owns and operates a standalone glove facility in Thailand, which produces both FootJoy and Titleist gloves, number one and number two selling glove brands in the market. We are confident that Acushnet supply chain footprint provides us with flexibility to adapt most notably within golf equipment our largest segment. As Sean will outline, we expect to mitigate a good portion of the current tariff impact by end of year and expect to realize further relief in 2026 from some of our actions that will take longer to materialize. With regards to pricing, we have not yet passed along increased tariff costs to consumers, but do anticipate taking some regional pricing action on select products as we gain clarity on the extent and timing of our mitigation efforts. In summary, we are pleased with our strong start to the year and the continued strength and resiliency of Acushnet core consumer the game's dedicated golfer. As you would expect our teams are focused on providing exceptional product fitting and service experiences to golfers and our trade partners and making the right long-term based decisions while we navigate this period of tariff uncertainty. Thanks for your attention this morning. I will now pass the call over to Sean.