Thanks, Bill. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today. Before jumping into our second quarter results, I would like to recognize George Holm. We announced in December after nearly 25 years with Performance Food Group Company, George has retired from his role as CEO. Over his career, George built an impeccable reputation as an industry leader, a visionary, and an agent of growth. Since Performance Food Group Company's IPO in '2, sales have more than quadrupled to over $60 billion, and the market cap of Performance Food Group Company has increased sevenfold. Much of which can be attributed to the vision and influence George has had on the company. More importantly, because of George's stewardship, Performance Food Group Company is defined by more than just financial results. It is a place where people want to work, customers and suppliers want to do business, and a preferred partner for strategic M&A. There's a reason that Performance Food Group Company is often the first and sometimes only call from prospective acquisition opportunities. Many of you have had the opportunity to meet with George and experience his knowledge and insight firsthand. On behalf of our entire organization, I would like to share my heartfelt thanks to George for everything he has done for the many thousands of people who have crossed his path. I'm also thrilled that George will continue to play an important role for Performance Food Group Company. As executive chair of our board, he will be heavily involved in the pursuit of strategic M&A opportunities, maintain his connection to key customers, and be active in Performance Food Group Company's overarching strategy. Following an industry icon like George comes with great responsibility, and I'm excited to take the helm and lead Performance Food Group Company through our next chapter. George and I have worked together closely for the past four years, developed a powerful friendship, and collaborated on the vision for Performance Food Group Company. As I look ahead, I'm excited to lead this organization, and I'm extremely confident in our ability to continue to drive growth and EBITDA performance by executing on our strategic priorities. In May, we outlined our three-year strategic vision, which the company and I are deeply committed to delivering. More specifically, this is a roadmap grounded by a balance of continued revenue growth, market share gains, gross margin enhancement initiatives, and improving operating leverage. The organization is off to a solid start in achieving our three-year plan and has strategies in place to give us a high level of confidence we will deliver. Let's now turn to our results for the second quarter of our fiscal 2026. Despite a difficult macro environment, I'm proud of our organization's ability to overcome the challenges in the final months of the calendar year. The quarter saw declining foot traffic, the impact of the government shutdown, and softer sales per location across our segments. Despite the challenging backdrop, our company was able to post solid revenue and profit performance within our previously stated guidance range. Breaking it down by segment, let's begin with food service. Our organization delivered 5.3% organic independent case growth driven by a 5.8% independent account growth. During the quarter, we gained share across independent, regional, and national business largely consistent with our gains in prior quarters. Share gains were broad-based across a range of concepts with particular strength in chicken, burger, barbecue, and seafood restaurants. To elaborate further, after a strong start to October, volume trends moderated soon after the government shutdown took effect. We did see some recovery once the shutdown was lifted, and we finished the calendar year with case growth in December roughly in line with the November result. According to Black Box data, industry-wide foot traffic decelerated through the quarter with December traffic down 3.5%. Our chain restaurant business followed a similar glide path reflecting consistent industry pressures. Our total chain restaurant volume grew by low single digits year over year, as new business we've onboarded over the past several quarters offset the softer traffic environment. We attribute our consistent market share outperformance in part to our efforts behind growing, training, and supporting the best sales force in the food service industry. Our efforts in this area are proven out in the independent restaurant space. We continued to hire new associates during the period ending December with nearly 6% more salespeople than we had at the end of calendar 2024. As we have discussed on past calls, we do not have a corporate-wide hiring mandate nor do we require artificial hiring goals. Instead, we emphasize the importance of expanding our sales force as a key driver of volume and market share growth while empowering our local operating companies to hire according to their specific needs. We still believe a rate of hiring at or above 6% makes sense for the long-term support of our growth rate, but expect this number to fluctuate in any given period. I want to take a moment to discuss the integration of Channing Brothers. As we discussed last quarter, we are pleased with the work being done at Cheney and expect this company to be a significant contributor to Performance Food Group Company's revenue and profit growth long into the future. That said, we have been very consistent in our messaging around synergy timing when we expect the financial performance of Cheney to accelerate. When we made the acquisition, Cheney was making meaningful investments in its infrastructure to support growth. More specifically, the addition of a new 350,000 square foot facility in Florence, South Carolina, and a new 42,000 square foot facility in Saint Cloud, Florida, to expand its manufacturing capabilities. These investments, along with other integration costs, have had a short-term impact on Cheney's performance and our overall P&L. Despite this activity, Cheney continues to grow independent cases at a rate consistent with the rest of our food service operating companies, gain share in its distribution markets, and provide its customer base with great service. To close out my comments on Cheney, I want to remind you that we anticipate the majority of the synergies to start flowing through the income statement late in year two through year three after the close of the acquisition. Profit performance for Cheney should begin accelerating accordingly. All in all, our food service segment had a solid second quarter growing volume through market share gains, new business wins, and expansion of our private brand portfolio. We faced two meaningful EBITDA hurdles in the quarter that are likely to persist in the Q with my earlier comments on Cheney and the impact of cheese and poultry deflation. Despite the challenges, we remain confident in our strategy and expect our results to accelerate as we move through our fourth quarter, setting us up for a strong fiscal 2027. Turning to the convenience segment, on our prior earnings calls, we disclosed the addition of sizable new business wins for Core Mark. In the final weeks of September, we successfully onboarded over 500 Love stores contributing nicely to our second quarter results. Also joining the Core Mark fold in December, were over 600 Racetrack locations which we successfully integrated into our network, setting the segment up for a strong finish to fiscal 2026. Let's look at the convenience segment's performance during the second quarter. Net sales increased 6.1%, benefiting from market share gains and the onboarding of the new accounts just discussed. Our data shows a mid-single-digit industry decline in the key convenience categories as persistent inflation continues to weigh on the channel. Hallmark's positive volume results reflect the company's strong share gain outperformance and execution during the period. Convenience segment sales were driven by low single-digit dollar growth from food, food service, and related products and mid-teen non-combustible nicotine product sales growth. Cigarette sales were flattish in the period. As a reminder, the mix shift away from cigarettes towards other nicotine categories and growth in food, food service, and related products causes a revenue headwind that is nicely accretive to our gross margin. This dynamic is a consistent secular tailwind for our profit growth which we expect to gain momentum over time. Moving on to profit. In the second quarter, our convenience segment adjusted EBITDA increased 13.4% as a result of strong cost discipline and operating efficiency in addition to business from Loves and Racetrack. Once again, our great team at Core Mark showed remarkable resilience and the ability to drive profit growth despite a challenging backdrop. Turning to specialty, trends in the second quarter were broadly similar to the first quarter. With a modest improvement in top-line trends coupled with nice productivity gains, produced segment adjusted EBITDA margin expansion. Sales growth was tempered by another difficult quarter in theater which was down over 30%, representing an approximate $50 million drag on overall sales. Outside of theaters, specialty performed well growing sales at a high single to low double-digit rate in the vending office coffee retail, campus, and travel channels. Proactive management of operating expenses produced nearly 7% segment adjusted EBITDA growth in the quarter, representing 40 basis points of margin expansion. Closing out my remarks, it's certainly been a dynamic operating environment to take over as Performance Food Group Company's CEO. That said, I'm inspired by our organization's ability to consistently gain share across our business segments, operate safely while delivering exceptional customer service, and enhance our operating leverage. Driving sustained growth in EBITDA dollars and margins for our shareholders. Our diversification seeks to provide consistent performance in a range of economic scenarios, and our strong pipeline of new potential business should result in consistent long-term revenue and profit growth for Performance Food Group Company. I'll now turn it over to Patrick, who will review our financial performance and outlook. Patrick?