Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Our teams continue to perform at a high level as we began executing our new strategic plan and driving changes across the organization. In the quarter, we grew volumes, improved our manufacturing cost per pound, and delivered strong cash flow. Starting on Slide 11, first quarter net sales were essentially flat, increasing $5 million, including a $24 million favorable impact from foreign currency translation. On a constant currency basis, net sales declined 1% compared with the prior year. Volume increased 6%, driven by customer wins and retention, led primarily by gains in North America and Asia. In North America, the rate of new customer volumes scaled earlier than we planned. The total volume increase also included lapping an approximately $15 million charge taken in the '5 related to a voluntary product withdrawal. Turning to the industry, restaurant traffic at several customer channels was flat in the quarter, including overall QSR traffic. While some are growing, including QSR chicken, QSR hamburger, however, was down low single digits and declined another percent in August. Restaurant traffic outside the US has been mixed. Traffic in certain markets, including the UK, our largest international market, declined 4%. Our customers continue to lean into value and menu innovation, including limited-time offerings to drive traffic and meet consumer needs. Price mix at constant currency rates was in line with our expectations, declining 7% compared with the prior year. As a reminder, this includes the carryover impact of fiscal 2025 price and trade investments that went into effect in the second quarter of last year, as well as ongoing support of our customers. It also includes unfavorable channel product mix within our segments. Looking at our segments, North America net sales declined 2% compared with the prior year, primarily due to lower net selling prices. Price mix declined 7%, and volume increased 5%, supported by recent customer contract wins and growth across channels. In our International segment, net sales increased 4%, including a favorable $24 million impact from foreign currency translation. At constant currency rates, net sales were flat. Volume grew 6% in the quarter, and price mix at constant currency rates declined 6%. This was primarily related to pricing actions in key international markets to support our customers. Our international segment remains well-positioned for the long term, supported by new modern manufacturing facilities, a broad and innovative portfolio, and an expanding global footprint. In the first quarter, Asia, including China, led our volume growth, reflecting solid market performance. Growth was supported primarily by contributions from multinational chains. In Europe, we expect that a strong crop, soft restaurant market demand, and increased competitive actions will continue to pressure price mix for the balance of the year. And in Latin America, we began shipping from our new facility in Argentina in early second quarter. While we are actively onboarding customers, we expect it will take time before the facility reaches target utilization level. We've seen competitive activity increase in Latin America, most notably in Brazil. Moving on from sales, as expected, on Slide 12, you can see that adjusted gross profit declined. This was primarily due to unfavorable price mix. This was partially offset by higher sales volume and a decrease in manufacturing cost per pound due primarily to benefits from our cost savings initiatives and the benefit of lapping an approximately $39 million charge in the prior year related to a voluntary product withdrawal. We're pleased with the progress we're making against our cost savings initiatives, and we remain on track to deliver fiscal 2026 savings targets. Our broader goal with our manufacturing initiatives, however, is to embed sustainable process improvements that will continue to enhance our manufacturing performance beyond the immediate efficiencies we are seeing. Partially offsetting these benefits was about $15 million of increased fixed factory burden absorption and about $4 million of incremental costs related to the start-up of the new production facility in Argentina. While we anticipated a decline in gross profit this quarter, the decline was less than expected, due primarily to stronger than anticipated sales volumes and incremental benefits realized from our cost savings initiatives. Adjusted SG&A declined $24 million versus the prior year quarter. The decline reflects benefits from cost savings initiatives. It also includes $7 million of miscellaneous income, primarily related to an insurance recovery and property tax refunds that will not repeat in future quarters. Equity method investments were a loss of $600,000 in the quarter, down from earnings of $11 million in the prior year quarter. This reflects the current lower rate of sales volume from our equity affiliate at lower prices but also an unfavorable mix of sales. As a result, adjusted EBITDA was essentially flat with last year at $302 million. The favorable impact on net sales from currency translation was almost entirely offset by higher local currency expenses, particularly cost of sales in our global markets. Turning to segment EBITDA performance on Slide 13, adjusted EBITDA in our North America segment declined 6%, or $18 million versus the prior year quarter to $260 million, primarily related to price and trade investments in support of our customers, which was only partially offset by higher sales volumes, lower manufacturing cost per pound, and lower adjusted SG&A. Lower manufacturing cost per pound and adjusted SG&A both benefited from our cost savings initiatives. We also lapped an approximately $21 million charge for the voluntary product withdrawal in the prior year. In our International segment, adjusted EBITDA increased $6 million to $57 million. This year-over-year improvement primarily reflects the absence of last year's $18 million charge related to the voluntary product withdrawal, lower potato prices, cost savings from our cost savings initiatives, and a $4 million favorable impact from foreign currency translation. These benefits were mostly offset by supporting our customers with price investments, increased competitive actions in certain markets, and approximately $4 million of start-up costs associated with our new manufacturing facility in Argentina. Moving to liquidity and cash flows on Slide 14, our liquidity and cash position remain healthy. We ended the quarter with approximately $1.4 billion of liquidity, comprised of approximately $1.3 billion available under our revolving credit facility and $99 million of cash and cash equivalents. Our net debt was $3.9 billion, and our adjusted EBITDA to net debt leverage ratio was 3.1 times on a trailing twelve-month basis. In 2026, we generated $352 million of cash from operations, up $22 million versus the prior year quarter. Lower inventories were the primary driver of the increase. Free cash flow was strong at $273 million. As a reminder, our Focus to Win plan includes approximately $60 million of incremental cash flow from working capital, mainly from reducing inventory in both fiscal 2026 and '27, or $120 million in total. We believe we're on track to deliver the fiscal 2026 target. Capital expenditures for the quarter declined $256 million to $79 million as we completed our production facility expansion project. For fiscal 2026, our capital spending is expected to be approximately $500 million, with approximately $400 million in maintenance and modernization and $100 million for environmental projects, which are mostly for wastewater treatment. Turning to Slide 15, we remain committed to returning cash to shareholders. In the first quarter, we returned $62 million to shareholders. This included $52 million in cash dividends, and we repurchased $10 million of stock, leaving us with $348 million authorized under the plan. This brings the total cash we've returned to shareholders since the spin in 2016 to over $2 billion. Our capital allocation priorities continue to be anchored in investing in the business, its capabilities, and areas where we are working to competitively differentiate Lamb Weston to execute our business strategy while maintaining a strong balance sheet and opportunistically returning capital to shareholders with dividends and share repurchases. Let's turn to our outlook on Slide 16. We are reaffirming our outlook for fiscal 2026. As a reminder, this outlook includes the contribution of a fifty-third week, with an additional week falling in the fourth quarter. We continue to expect revenue at constant currency rates in the range of $6.35 billion to $6.55 billion, which is a 2% decline to a 2% increase. We expect year-over-year volume growth behind customer momentum in both segments. In our North America segment, we expect volume to grow in both the first and second half of the year. Note that while volumes in the first quarter came in above expectations, this reflects the acceleration of new customer activity that we planned for in later periods. In our international segment, we expect volume in the back half of the year to be essentially flat as we lap the new customer acquisitions from the prior year and we continue operating in a competitive environment. We also continue to anticipate price mix will be unfavorable at constant currency. As of the end of the quarter, we have secured approximately 75% of our global open contract volume at pricing levels generally consistent with expectations. As anticipated, unfavorable price mix will be more pronounced in the first half, reflecting the carryover pricing actions from fiscal 2025. The effect is expected to moderate in the second half of the year, supported by new contracts signed this year. Our adjusted EBITDA guidance range remains at $1 billion to $1.2 billion. As a reminder, adjusted EBITDA now excludes noncash share-based compensation expense. It is available in the reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures that accompanies the earnings release we filed this morning. Despite the outperformance in the first quarter, with only one quarter behind us, we believe it's prudent to maintain our guidance range. While we previously excluded any impact from tariffs, the range now incorporates tariffs in the balance of the year, based on our latest view of enacted tariffs by the US and other governments. Additionally, given the outperformance of the first quarter's gross profit from higher than planned volume, we expect gross profit margins in the second quarter to be relatively flat with the first quarter. Due primarily to as expected first quarter input cost inflation being flat to slightly down compared with a year ago due to the steep increase in open market potato prices in Europe in the prior year, going forward, beginning in the second quarter, we expect low single-digit inflation, including the benefit of this year's lower raw potato prices. We also expect higher factory burdens from longer than expected planned maintenance downtime at one of our plants and additional start-up expenses and factory burden related to the start-up of Argentina plant to adversely affect our margin performance in our International segment in the second quarter. Turning to adjusted SG&A, our first quarter SG&A as a percentage of revenue was lower than our expectation for the full year. As I previously mentioned, the quarter included $7 million of miscellaneous income that will not repeat in future quarters. In addition, at year-end, we shared our plan to invest approximately $10 million of SG&A in innovation, advertising, and promotion expenses to support our long-term strategic plan. These investments are slated for the remainder of the year. While not in our guidance, the net sales and adjusted EBITDA we are updating our tax rate guidance from approximately 26% to a range of 26% to 27%. We now expect the tax rate in the first half to be in the low thirties, and the second half expectation remains in the low 20s. We do not expect that the recently enacted US federal tax legislation will have a material impact on our fiscal 2026 tax rate. And finally, our outlook reflects the progress we are making with our customers, the cost savings we are on track to deliver, and the early but positive results of the work by our teams to execute Focus to Win within a competitive market. I'll now turn the call back over to Mike.