Thank you, Ryan, and good morning, everyone. As many of you know, this marks my first week as CEO of MSC Industrial Direct Co., Inc. Before we dive into our fiscal first quarter performance, I would like to share some thoughts since we last spoke. First and foremost, it's an honor and privilege to serve as the fifth CEO in MSC's eighty-plus year history. As part of the transition over the last couple of months, I've spent time engaging with our people, our suppliers, and our customers. This time has reaffirmed our direction, and I would like to share more about those near-term priorities on our path to creating incremental value. First, we are reconnecting and growing with our core customer, and we must remain steadfast in our focus to execute on the initiatives that have restored this growth. Most of these initiatives have been in flight for less than a year, and tremendous opportunity remains ahead. In addition to our work on pricing, website, and marketing, our highest priority over the last year has been to optimize the design of our sales organization to better match resources to potential and put us closer to the core customer. At the end of the first quarter, we turned our attention to our service model, now applying the same principles and aligning those teams to our more efficient geographic territory design. This will lead to an improved customer experience and enable us to further optimize our cost structure in early 2Q. We now look forward to driving sales excellence as we leverage our recent organizational changes and our new leadership structure that balances long-term MSC tenure with new thinking from the outside. I am particularly excited now that Jaida Nadi is onboarded in her role as SVP of sales. She will continue to strengthen our sales execution in the field as Kim Shaklet moves fully into her new role as SVP customer experience. By decentralizing and streamlining decision-making in this new structure, we will amplify the impacts of these changes and strengthen our position to achieve our long-term vision. To enhance customer experience and accelerate our ability to capture a greater share of wallet. To truly outperform, we must leverage our supplier community as a strong partner in these efforts as well. Over a year ago, we created a supplier council that we meet with regularly to share ideas and opportunities. These discussions are now evolving to the development of joint strategies to accelerate MSC's growth. For example, turning to slide four, I'm pleased to announce that in late February, we will be hosting an inaugural growth forum where approximately 1,400 MSC associates in customer-facing roles will come together with our supplier community. The event was designed in collaboration with our supplier council for maximum effectiveness and impact. Using data to pair sellers and suppliers in pursuit of a pipeline of customer opportunities, this highly curated three-day industry-leading event will be unlike our previous or other supplier conferences in its level of focus and partnership with our suppliers. We expect this event to be a key growth accelerator for MSC, demonstrating MSC's clear commitment to take sales execution to the next level. To enable our vision, it's clear that we must drive speed and consistency in our daily decision-making through our technology platform. Our CIO, John Reichelt, and his organization have continued making progress on the evaluation of our systems roadmap and will provide recommendations upon completion. We must also strengthen and improve financial visibility through operating systems to enhance our daily decision-making. Having the right leader will be critical in achieving this, which is why we are taking a selective approach to our search for a permanent CFO that remains a top priority. And finally, we're committed to elevating our strong differentiated culture. Our culture is a competitive advantage. Rooted in a highly talented and technical team that consistently puts the customer first. Building on the proud family legacy that has shaped who we are, we are raising expectations, driving more rigorous performance management, and embedding a mindset of continuous improvement. To deliver even stronger results. By remaining steadfast in these key areas of focus, we will capture the tremendous potential I see ahead and position MSC to achieve higher levels of profitable growth. In short, I am more energized than ever, and I want to thank our entire team of associates for their support and endless dedication to providing the best service to our customers. Before we move to the quarter's results, I want to highlight one further element of our strong culture and our commitment to improving each and every day and share with you some highlights from our most recent ESG report released last month. First, we reaffirmed our commitment to the planet and established a new long-term goal of reducing our scope one and two greenhouse gas emissions by 15% by 2030. We supported the recycling of over 8,000 pounds of carbide. We were recognized as being a best company to work for by several organizations across several dimensions. And lastly, we continue our strong partnership with nonprofit organizations, including American Corporate, with whom we work to provide mentorship to military members as they transition into a civilian workforce. Now digging deeper into our 1Q results on slide six, I am pleased with our performance in the fiscal first quarter. Average daily sales came in at the midpoint of our outlook and increased 4% year over year. This was primarily driven by benefits from price of 4.2% that was partially offset by volumes that contracted by 30 basis points. The decline in volumes was largely driven by the federal government shutdown, which negatively impacted sales by approximately 100 basis points in the quarter. This headwind was felt most in the public sector, as seen by a year-over-year decline of 5% in the quarter. Following the resolution of the shutdown, however, we have seen public sector sales resume growth in December. We were pleased to see national accounts return to growth in the quarter, but once again, underpinning our sales performance were daily sales trends in core and other customers that have now outperformed total company sales for two consecutive quarters. Core customers grew approximately 6% in Q1, buoyed by our initiatives around e-commerce marketing and seller optimization. Looking at the details, we experienced another quarter of year-over-year improvement in the number of customer location touches logged by field sales in fiscal 1Q. This is having a direct impact on our sales per rep per day trend, as seen by the high single-digit improvement in this quarter. The positive trend in these two metrics, as well as in total company sales, was achieved with fewer sellers, reflecting the efficiency of our new territory design. We will now take these learnings and apply them to geographies outside the US. Second, benefits from our web upgrades and enhanced marketing efforts continue to be realized in the quarter. Average daily sales on the web increased mid-single digits year over year. This was supported by several KPIs that continued improving year over year during the quarter, including the conversion rates of our top channels and direct traffic to the website. With respect to marketing, our efforts continued producing benefits in the quarter, including high single-digit improvement in the daily sales of our uncovered core customers. Given this building momentum, accelerated investment in marketing will likely continue. And third, we continue expanding our solutions footprint with our installed vending base, which was up roughly 9% year over year, and our implant programs, which were up 13% at quarter end. While implant signings remain strong, our year-over-year growth in the net number of programs at quarter end moderated in comparison to recent trending. This is not due to a slowing in the opportunity funnel, but rather an increased emphasis on sharpening financial acumen in the field. As a result, we saw a number of existing in programs convert back to more cost-effective service options better scaled to customer needs, such as traditional BMI. By working together with those customers, we were able to retain revenues at a lower cost to serve. Moving to profitability for the quarter. Gross margin of 40.7% came in at the midpoint of our outlook. As a reminder, in fiscal 4Q, gross margin was pressured by negative price cost due to greater than anticipated levels of inflation during the last two months of that quarter. This was addressed in fiscal 1Q by taking action on price in late September and early October. Given the timing of these actions, price cost and gross margin performed similar to September. That said, I'm pleased with our performance with price cost and gross margin, both returning to expected levels as we exited the first quarter. Reported operating margin came in at 7.9%, and adjusted operating margin of 8.4% came in at the upper range of our outlook, resulting in an incremental operating margin of 18% on an adjusted basis. Looking ahead, under a mid-single-digit growth scenario, we continue to expect adjusted incremental operating margins to be approximately 20% for the full fiscal year. Underpinning this confidence are several factors. First, we expect continued traction on our growth initiatives. And, hence, growth above the IP index. Second, we anticipate ongoing benefits from price, which should yield gross margin stability. And third, our productivity initiatives, including our ongoing network optimization, should continue yielding benefits, allowing us to support higher levels of revenues in the back half of the year with moderating operating expense growth. Turning to the environment, I would describe demand across the majority of our primary markets as stable. Aerospace remained strong, while some areas of softness remain in automotive and heavy truck. These mixed levels of demand are reflected in the MBI, as seen by the recent readings, which remain in contractionary territory. Looking at Slide seven, however, I am encouraged to see how MSC is performing in this environment. Average daily sales outpaced the industrial production index for the second consecutive quarter as a result of our improved core customer performance. Thus far in the fiscal second quarter, average daily sales for fiscal December, which ended for MSC on January 3, improved approximately 2.5% year over year. On a sequential basis, however, the month-over-month decline of roughly 20% was worse than what we typically experience in the month. Feedback we were receiving from customers around their planned shutdown activity suggested the month would be challenging. However, in addition, Christmas and New Year's occurred on a Thursday this year, which historically is typically the most challenging day for the holidays to fall on. To put some color on this, our sales from Christmas through the end of the fiscal month were down approximately 20% year over year, and weighed heavily on the overall growth rate in fiscal December. Having said that, we were pleased to see the core customer maintained its trend of outperforming total company sales during the month. Looking ahead with only three days into fiscal January, visibility into demand levels entering the new calendar year and the remainder of the quarter is limited. Greg will provide more detail on what this implies for our 2Q outlook. But despite this uncertainty, under a mid-single-digit growth scenario, we continue to expect adjusted incremental operating margins to be approximately 20% for the full fiscal year, supported by the momentum from the execution of our initiatives that continues to build. And with that, I will now turn the call over to Greg to cover our financial results in greater detail and expectations for the fiscal second quarter.