Thank you, George, and good morning, everyone. As George mentioned, it's been a dynamic year from a trend perspective. We had a strong start to fiscal Q1, and we're progressing well through November. However, in December and through much of the third quarter, we faced disruption, including calendar shifts, adverse weather conditions in both the current year and last year period comparison and of course, a dynamic macroeconomic and consumer backdrop. February posed challenges for our industry as we experienced significant weather disruptions and a consumer reacting to economic uncertainty. We've seen steady improvement through March. And in April, we finished the month with solid top and bottom line results. While April's outcome is certainly encouraging and shows science, consumer trends are improving, we remain hyper focused on what we can control. As George said, we have a broad and diverse business that has proven resilient in challenging operating environments. For us, we remain laser focused on our strategic priorities, starting with driving growth through our sales associates across all operating segments continuing to leverage our proprietary brands and procurement synergies to expand gross margins and leverage technology to drive efficiency throughout our supply chain. Now let's take a deeper look into our three operating segments, starting with our Foodservice business. Overall, foodservice growth was strong, benefiting from the addition of Cheney Brothers and Jose Santiago in the period. As George mentioned, organic independent case growth took a step back in February, growing 3.4% over the full third quarter. These results reflect steady market share gains with independent customer account growth, increasing 3.9% year-over-year and lines growing at 4.3% as we continue to broaden our offerings to customers. Performance Brands sold to independent restaurants were 53% in the quarter, continuing our strong momentum in creating value for our customers with our company owned brand portfolio. As we emphasized last quarter, these metrics show that while we cannot control the industry backdrop, we can arm our organization with the products and resources to provide our customer base a differentiated value proposition. Shifting to our chain restaurant business. We grew cases by 1.5% in the quarter, an excellent result given the current backdrop. The growth for our chain business was boosted by the onboarding of new business, which is ongoing since the second quarter and continued into the fourth quarter. We expect these new business wins to boost fourth quarter results providing incremental case growth and favorable profit profile versus our legacy chain business. Sales and margins were helped by pricing inflation in the quarter. Current inflation rates in Foodservice remain in a range that we considered very manageable. We are closely watching the broad commodities market and preparing for any increases driven by recent tariff considerations. We have not experienced any disruption from tariff actions to date. We continue to assess our exposure, which is currently not looked at as material. However, we're working closely with our suppliers and customers on contingency plans in the event inflation moves meaningfully higher. One inflation strategy we are focused on is positioning our high quality company owned brands as the best value proposition for our customers. Again, our sales force continues to win new accounts and gain share despite the difficult operating environment. We have steadily increased our sales force headcount through the year, attracting talent from across the Foodservice landscape. Fiscal year-to-date, our Foodservice sales force headcount increased by 250 associates or 8% year-over-year. This is roughly the pace of hiring we anticipate for the balance of the year, assuming we continue to see positive signs from the consumer. From a profit perspective, the Foodservice segment continues to experience positive margin momentum driven by favorable mix shift, profitable chain business growth and procurement synergies. These factors, in addition to the contributions of Cheney Brothers and Jose Santiago drove 29% segment adjusted EBITDA growth in the quarter, translating to 25 basis points of margin expansion. Turning to our Convenience segment. The narrative for the Convenience industry has remained consistent throughout the fiscal year. Despite a challenging volume backdrop, Core-Mark continues to win new business, take market share and expand within existing customers through new offerings, particularly in Foodservice. In the third quarter, the Convenience segment, volume grew by approximately 1%, well above the industry performance. Through the full fiscal year, the Convenience industry, key categories, including snacks, candy and health and beauty have declined at a mid-single digit rate, while most other key categories are down low-single digits. Over the same time frame, Core-Mark has grown each of these areas by low-single digits except candy, which is flat. More recently, we remain cautiously optimistic about sales performance in April, which was notably better than recent periods. While too early to call it a trend, it is certainly a positive indicator. We are very excited about our pipeline of new business in Convenience, we have found that our proposition as a consolidated Convenience and Foodservice distributor provides a competitive advantage and has been one of the key reasons that we continue to add new accounts at a fast pace. We will expand more on this topic at our Investor Day. Finishing up our segment commentary with Specialty, formerly known as our Vistar segment. Total net sales for Specialty were roughly flat in the third quarter on a low-single digit volume decline in the period. As expected, the third quarter was difficult for both theater and value channels, due to the lack of content and competitive activity in the theater and consumer challenges for the value segment. On the positive side, we have seen stabilization in our vending and office coffee business, benefiting from the return to office trend. Our small parcel business has improved as we build upon our small but rapidly growing e-commerce business. Something you hear more about at our Investor Day. In conclusion, total PFG operating companies weathered a difficult backdrop. From a competitive positioning standpoint, we grew share across all three segments. We have continued to make progress in our mix and margins and are performing well operationally. We feel good about our positioning to drive growth and deliver on our customer value proposition. I'll now turn the call over to Patrick, who will review our financial performance and outlook. Patrick?