Thanks, Mike, and good morning or afternoon to everyone on the call today. Second quarter sales declined 12% versus last year due to a client due to a decline in volumes and elevated promotions. Partially PG&A continued to post strong results with 7% sales growth due to the greater volume of accessories on products like Polaris Expedition and Ranger. Northstar gross profit margins were primarily pressured by lower net pricing related to a higher promotional environment, removing the impact from promotions, our progress against our target of realizing 105 million in operational savings more than offset the impact of lower volume on absorption. Year to date, we have realized approximately $50 million in operational savings related to materials, logistics and planned spend. We continue to work towards the $150 million savings target, which would be expected to have a positive impact on the earnings power of Polaris once industry conditions. Now analyze in off-road sales were down 6%, mainly driven by volume decline, razor as well as a headwind from elevated promotions. Share within our RV was flat year with gains in side-by-sides, including Ranger and crossover. Polaris expedition continues to provide a tailwind and crossover helping to drive five points of share gain in this category. During the quarter, promotions in the channel on ATVs as OEM.s work to clear inventory leading share losses in this subcategory during the quarter. However, our data reflects almost a point of our RV share gain on a dollar basis. While we did see margin pressure in the quarter, driven by the factors already mentioned, I remain pleased with the progress we are making within our factories that are driving real changes to our cost structure are helping to mitigate the impact from unabsorbed overhead from volume reductions. As we look towards the third quarter, we expect shipment volumes to be down meaningfully given the decisions we have made around prioritizing dealer health and inventory levels. In this challenging environment, promotions are expected to remain elevated as the industry continues to use promotions to stimulate demand and clear non-current inventory. We expect further pressure on margins given these lower volumes in the impact on plant overhead absorption. Switching to On-Road sales during the quarter were down 19% lower shipments, particularly in the heavyweight segment. Indian Motorcycles lost market share during the quarter, driven by weakness in the heavyweight category. We believe fundamental consumer retail was weaker than what the industry experienced in the quarter as industry retail was stimulated by competitive process launches. We began shipping our new Scout Indian Motorcycle in June and expect that to improve in the back half of the year as these spikes arrive at dealerships. During the third quarter, we continue to expect lower retail as the industry grapples with the consumer that seems to have cut back on larger discretionary purchases. That continues to be a lot of excitement around the new Indian Scout models. However, this is expected to only somewhat offset industry pressure. In marine, sales were down 40% as the industry continued to deal with elevated dealer inventory levels and higher interest rates impacting the consumer's decision to purchase our shipments in the quarter to decline with dealer inventory down approximately 18% versus a year ago and in line with 2018 levels, which we view as a viable baseline for the industry. Ssi data through May reflected a decline in year-over-year retail and what would be held share in pontoons. We ceded some share and direct votes. Gross profit margin was down, given the top line pressures driving less fixed cost absorption. We continue to be agile with variable costs, which is demonstrated with gross margins remaining above 20%. Despite the significant reductions in volume, we are continuing to see a challenging environment across the industry during the third quarter as dealers work through current inventory levels and consumer purchases are hampered by elevated interest rates. The next big data point will come early this fall and dealers begin to make ordering decisions as we head into the 2025 selling season. Moving to our financial position, we are lowering our expectations for cash generation this year due to our updated thoughts on our business performance. With this update, we have realigned CapEx and are driving working capital efficiencies to improve our use of cash during this period. Given the change in volume expectations, it will take us time to flush through working capital. As a result, we expect cash performance in the fourth quarter to be better than cash generation in the third quarter. We maintain our goal of offsetting dilution from stock-based compensation program this year and well ahead of our target of reducing the basic shares outstanding by 10%. During the quarter, we used cash to continue our investments in innovation and key capital projects and returned over $100 million to stockholders in the form of dividends and share repurchases. We remain confident in our financial position and are driving our teams to improve working capital in this part of the economic cycle. Ladies and expectations for 2024. We have lowered our financial targets for the year, given the soft retail trends across all product lines in a misalignment that has deteriorated relative to our expectations at the start of the year. With these factors at play, we have decided to right-size shipments and increased our promotional efforts, underscoring our ongoing commitment to prioritizing the health of our dealer partners heading into the second half of the result of this decision will be lower shipping volumes leading to lower absorption at our plants, which is expected to negatively impact our Q3 results more heavily than the fourth quarter. These cuts are happening across each segment. However, they are more pronounced in off-road, given reductions already taken in on-road and marine for sales, we now expect us to be down 17% to 20% versus a year ago. In addition to lower volumes, we expect headwinds from criminal activity as well as finance interest, both of which are expected to be larger than our original guidance. As Mike noted, the added finance interest is in part due to our decision to help dealers manage the elevated costs there see from carrying a higher value of inventory relative to the past few years. As it relates to our decision to curtail shipments further, you can see our initial push inventory on top of our current revised plan. Recall that we started going down this path last year with Marine and razor due to what we were seeing in the channel as well as trends in retail. We began this year with Sun retail based on current trends and macroeconomic forecast within this plan, the beginning of the year, we were targeting a reduction of approximately 10% in shipments versus 2023 to help dealers lower their inventory levels. Fast-forward to today, and we have seen interest rates stay higher for longer, along with elevated inflation rate, inflationary pressures, which have impacted consumer discretionary purchase patterns on larger ticket items, coupled with the feedback from our dealers and how flooring cost that quickly ramped up and are now one of the dealers largest expenses. Based on this, we have made the decision to step in and hold the value proposition with our dealers by supporting them with additional floor rate as well as reducing our shipments further in the back half of the year versus our original plan, we now expect to end the year shipping to levels. Secondary inventory is down 15% to 20% versus last year, helping to put our dealers and ourselves on better footing going into 2025. Moving to EPS, we are now expecting adjusted EPS to be down over 50% and in the range of three 50 to $4. Importantly, the magnitude of the volume drop we are dealing with has an oversized impact on margins due to lower absorption of overhead at our plants and other fixed costs. Various items impacting sales volumes, additional promotions and unfavorable mix represented $5 EPS headwind. From a manufacturing perspective, we are seeing approximately $0.5 of net headwind with negative absorption accounting for $1.90 of the EPS takedown in overshadowing $1.40 of APN. The great work our teams are doing on the targeted operational efficiencies to mitigate these pressures. The bright side is that these operational efficiencies are expected to positively impact the earnings power in a normal operating in macro environments. Additionally, within OpEx, we have cut spending and noncritical areas and completed a headcount reduction earlier in July. We believe these necessary as we right-size the organization for the current environment. As noted before, these cuts to do not impact our investments in growth and innovation, which we may long-term strategy. From an EPS and net income perspective, it is important to note that percentage reduction is significantly more than the percentage reduction of revenue, gross profit and EBITDA due to the relatively fixed nature of depreciation and debt interest for the third quarter. A few things to note given how our plan looks today, the result of cutting shipments is expected to have a more meaningful impact. The third quarter results versus Q4. Retail expected to remain down, although we expect to gain market share with innovation. Before I turn it back to Mike, I want to emphasize that many of these headwinds are not typically small operating environment or an industry that has historically grown low to mid single digits. We wouldn't implant absorption tailwinds in an environment where we are growing at or near historical levels and shipping to retail plus our business. Typically mix mixes up with the introduction of new innovation and technology, as well as the progression to side-by-sides from a current promotional levels are elevated for many reasons associated with the macroeconomic factors and specifically specific industry dynamics overtime, we see an opportunity for these to come down, which we believe would benefit margins. Additionally, the operational efficiency gains we are making are still expected to have a positive impact on earnings. So while the environment is challenging, we have a positive outlook on the future powersports MLRs. We believe the decisions we're making today are in the best interest of all our stakeholders, including customers, dealers in place and our stockholders. We intend on emerging stronger with a robust pipeline of innovation, leaner operations and a healthy level of cash with the ultimate goal of delivering strong stockholder returns. With that, I'll turn it back over to Mike to wrap up the call. Mike?