Thanks, J.C., and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. Before we get started, I want to take a minute to acknowledge the immense devastation resulting from Hurricane Helene and Milton. Our team has been checking in with our dealers and impacted areas, and we've provided support, sending Polaris RANGERs to assist, search and rescue teams and traveling to hard-to-reach areas and we donated Polaris generators to those without power. Polaris and Polaris employees have also donated generously to the Red Cross, Salvation Army and other organizations to help with the costs associated with the devastation from these massive storms. On behalf of the Polaris team, I want to send our thoughts and prayers to those impacted by the storm. Now on to our Q3 update. In July, we told you we were taking actions to lower production and shipments to protect our dealer network during challenging macroeconomic backdrop. As a result, our third quarter sales dropped 23%. This included additional shipment cuts during the quarter in response to a lower-than-anticipated retail environment. While these actions negatively impacted our short-term results, they were a necessary move to support our strong partnership with dealers and to hold firm to our commitment to reduce dealer inventory. As I discussed on our Q2 earnings call, we continue to make prudent moves to manage profitability in this part of the cycle while remaining focused on our long-term strategy. That includes delivering exceptional customer experience through a strong, healthy dealer network, investing in innovation to fuel future growth and maintaining agile and efficient operations. Our size and scale in the industry as well as our consistent focus positions us to outperform competitors as markets stabilize. I'm pleased with our progress through the third quarter on reducing dealer inventory as we are now below where we started the year. With lower-than-expected retail in the third quarter and the year, we again lowered our shipment expectations to ensure we meet our commitments to bring ORV dealer inventory down 15% to 20%. We expect this challenging retail environment to persist into next year, and as such, we will continue to protect dealers through superior inventory management. I'll talk more about promotions in the following slide, but I want to note here that throughout the third quarter, we observed a higher-than-expected promotional environment as other OEMs continue to deal with elevated inventory levels and higher-than-normal noncurrent inventory. As a result, these other OEMs are aggressively promoting to move these vehicles in a challenging retail environment. Some of this promotional activity is driving unsustainable short-term share movements as these OEMs focus on cleaning up unhealthy inventory. While we will not chase many of these aggressive promotional moves, the elevated level drove higher costs for Polaris as we targeted specific segments to protect. Our margins saw added pressure from the additional shipment reductions as well as higher promotional costs within the quarter. This resulted in a gross margin profit decline of 185 – 184 basis points and an adjusted EPS decrease of 73%. Elevated competitive dealer inventory, coupled with the promotional behavior I just spoke to has led to choppy market share results. While share was down across our segments in the quarter, year-to-date and on a rolling 12-month basis, we've held share in ORV with strength in RANGER and Polaris XPEDITION. I couldn't be prouder of our team's continued focus on improving our operational effectiveness to position us to emerge from this period as a stronger, more efficient and better company. Outside of innovation, our largest focus is on continuing to enhance our overall operating effectiveness and to drive strong lean practices, improve supply chain, logistics and operations. Last quarter, I mentioned improvements in achieving our build schedules, and I think it's important for me to continue to provide you with proof points and evidence of our progress. For example, within one of our largest plants, we've seen output increased by approximately 20% compared to historic levels with the same amount of labor input. At our largest plant, we've seen an almost 10% increase in vehicles coming off the line clean compared to 2023. We currently have the fewest number of ORV vehicles on hold in our factory since before the pandemic. This marks a 50% decrease in rework. Lastly, we achieved a 7% reduction in our per hour plant costs at two of our larger plants. This past quarter, I spent time in Huntsville and Monterrey talking to our manufacturing leaders and teams on the line. I saw firsthand how much progress we are making to improve working conditions, making it easier for them to do their jobs and driving improved efficiencies. By eliminating redundancies and inefficiencies in our manufacturing processes, we've enabled a more productive and cost-effective use of our skilled labor force. We're also recognizing savings in areas such as material and logistics, and we continue to closely monitor hiring and spending to align with the current demand environment. Innovation is the lifeblood of our industry, and we remain committed to strategically spending on key R&D investments. Polaris is and will remain the innovation leader in our industry, it is what we're known for, and it is what will enable us to emerge from these challenging times as a better positioned company. With the new product introductions we've made over the past 18 months, we have the most compelling lineup of products as we enter 2025, and we also have exciting new products set to launch next year. Third quarter retail was down 7%, which was slightly below our expectations, driven by persistent inflation, elevated interest rates and financially stressed consumers. While it was encouraging to see the Fed take action with a 50 basis point rate cut in September, we're not seeing any immediate impact on retail, and we do not believe one cut will stimulate demand in this environment. Consumers remain cautious with discretionary spending, especially for larger purchases, and it will likely take more interest rate cuts and time to improve the financial position before spending returns on pre-pandemic levels. Specifically within off-road, utility was down low single-digits with RANGER slightly outperforming ATVs. While recreation was down for the eighth straight quarter, growth in crossover was a bright spot at over 25%, led by the Polaris XPEDITION. Feedback coming out of our Dealer Meeting in August was positive with dealers appreciating our candor around the industry and our commitment to lower inventory. Dealers also responded well to the pricing updates we made, as well as the new R