Thank you, Kevin, and good morning, everyone. Our performance this quarter included sales growth and improved profitability, in addition to returning meaningful cash back to shareholders. As Kevin mentioned earlier, restaurant foot traffic was down 4% during Q1. Traffic levels also improved throughout the quarter, an important positive signal for the industry. Here at Sysco, we are focused on executing on the things that we can control as the market leader by growing share profitably. This includes continued improvements to the core business to better align expenses with volume growth, improving supply chain productivity and corporate expenses, all while delivering world-class customer service. We exited the quarter with stronger year-over-year top and bottom-line growth rates during the month of September, adding to our confidence in our full-year guidance. While traffic is an important proxy for industry health, Sysco has proven our ability to grow in any environment. Looking back at the past 12 months, we've seen on average 600 basis points positive spread between our growth in industry traffic to accrete leverage on our P&L. We believe the current macro and industry challenges are transitory, and as volumes improve, we believe we are well-positioned to fully leverage our size and skill advantages. Additionally, our strong investment-grade balance sheet coupled with our robust operating cash flow allows us to invest in business and reward our shareholders. We remain on target to return $2 billion back to shareholders this fiscal year through share repurchase and dividends. Looking ahead to the remainder of the year, we continue to expect a more normal rate of top-line growth, in particular from local, in the second-half of the year. The second half is expected to deliver mixed benefits as well as other P&L benefits from our actions across operations. This includes our plan to escalate strategic sourcing efforts this year, which we expect will positively impact gross profit dollars and margins in the second half. This will be coupled with continued supply chain expense rigor, which we expect to progress over the course of the year. Additionally, we are optimizing our portfolio with an ROIC lens by announcing the planned divestment, our JV in Mexico, which will enable us to re-deploy and resources on higher margin, higher growth international markets. We are confident that our incremental actions will deliver positive operating leverage as we progress into FY ‘25 and beyond. Now turning to a summary of our reported results for the quarter, starting on slide 14. For the first quarter, our enterprise sales grew 4.4%, driven by U.S. Foodservice growing 4.6%, International growing 3%, and SYGMA growing 7.3%. This sales growth is within our guidance and the algorithm which we shared during Investor Day. With respect to volume, total U.S. Foodservice volume increased 2.7% and local volume increased 0.2%. Don positively impacted U.S. Foodservice volume by 2.6% and local volumes by 1.6%. National volume growth in the quarter also included margin expansion driven by contract renewals with existing customers and new customer wins. We produced $3.8 billion in gross profit of 2.9% and gross margin of 18.3% was down 27 basis points due to national mix increase, decrease in fiscal brand penetration, and timing of benefits from strategic sourcing. Kevin spoke to the updated sales compensation model rollout at the start of Q1, resulting in a sequential improvement in new customer acquisitions, an important step to drive future penetration related to growing share of wallets. Second-half gross margins are expected to expand from growing local, improving Sysco brand penetration, and driving strategic sourcing benefits to the bottom line. Our gross profit dollar improvement reflected our ability to continue to effectively manage product inflation which came in at 2.2% of the total enterprise consistent with our expectations. Specific to Sysco brand, penetration rates decreased by 59 basis points to 36.5% in U.S. Broadline and 55 basis points to 47% in U.S. local results. We continue to improve with local customers with single units, despite pressure from local businesses with multiple units, we tend to utilize more national brand products. As Kevin mentioned, our national brand suppliers have improved fill rates as of late. We have a strong history of growing Sysco brand penetration, and we have trade management actions to improve the mix and penetration over the course of the year. We continued to improve corporate expenses, which were down 14.5% from the prior year, on adjusted basis, driven by efficiency work that was deployed in FY ’24 and incremental actions during the quarter. Overall, adjusted operating expenses were $2.9 billion for the quarter, or 14.1% of sales and 18 basis points improvement from the prior year, reflecting supply chain and corporate expense efficiencies. Our supply chain remains fully stacked. We continue to improve colleague retention year-over-year, with retention more than doubling, and we are building on productivity gains with pieces per labor hour up low to mid-single digits year-over-year. Turning to field expenses, we remain disciplined around the pacing of our sales professional hires, and we'll focus on the quality and return on investments of the new hires. We are deliberate and disciplined on when and where we add. These investments are well-laddered, with this year's hires starting to drive financial contributions next year and thereafter. Looking at it from a different angle, approximately 50% of the year-over-year increase in adjusted operating expenses was driven by our investments in higher selling expenses, which includes sales professional hires and depreciation expenses related to new facilities. Two examples would be our net new distribution centers in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Sysco Broadline, and Los Angeles for our Restaurant business. The return of these investments will not be in the period, but several quarters later as we bring new customers into the fold driven by the capacity available from these new buildings. These actions will help contribute to positive operating leverage for the year. Overall, adjusted operating income was $873 million for the quarter. Our international segment continued to deliver substantial growth, demonstrating positive operating leverage and margin expansion. This included a 12.1% increase in adjusted operating income, with our teams successfully executing the Sysco playbook and growing substantially across Canada and Europe. Adjusted operating income growth also benefited from SYGMA contributing 38.5% profit growth as we continue to focus on profit enhancement and growth of the additions of new customers. We were able to prune our portfolio by exiting customers last year that did not meet our profit threshold and bringing in new customers at healthier margin profile. For the quarter, adjusted EBITDA increased to $1.1 billion or up 4.4%. The health of our balance sheet remains a source of competitive advantage and is industry leading. We ended the quarter at a 2.7 times net debt leverage ratio, which is within our target. We ended the quarter with $11.6 billion in net debt and approximately $3.3 billion in total liquidity, which is substantially above our minimum threshold. Our debt has wall-laddered without any maturities over $1 billion until FY ‘27. Turning to our cash flow, we generated approximately $53 million in operating cash flow and increased our free cash flow for the quarter by $81 million. Our first quarter is typically our lowest cash flow quarter of the year due to seasonality, with the improvement this quarter showing strong quality of earnings and prudent management of working capital. Our strong financial position enabled us to return more than $359 million to shareholders this quarter. We remain confident in growing both top and bottom-line results in FY ‘25 in line with our financial algorithm range. We continue to be confident as we believe this algorithm is achievable and one we can deliver on a consistent basis. Importantly, we are reiterating our 2025 guidance metrics as seen on slide 20. During FY ‘25, we expect net sales growth of 4% to 5%. Net sales growth includes inflation of approximately 2% which we are seeing now, and positive volume growth of low single-digits for the year. We also anticipate benefits from M&A during the year. All in, we are guiding to adjusted EPS growth of 6% to 7% in line with our financial algorithm range. Regarding phasing for the year, the second quarter will include benefits from an improved traffic environment relative to Q1. Q2 will also include significant comparisons, lapping the highest level of local case growth of 2024, and over 11% adjusted EPS growth. All in for the quarter, we currently expect a slight sequential improvement in the rates of adjusted EPS growth year-over-year relative to Q1, with the growth rate turning more positive in the second half. We continue to believe the second half will benefit from a stronger macro, modest industry traffic improvement, and benefits from investments in sales professionals and other growth initiatives. Additionally, we expect second half margins to benefit from our sourcing efforts, leveraging our unique skill advantages. This is essentially an expansion of strategic sourcing benefits to include a wider basket of categories, and further leveraging our geographic buying power, as well as improving inbound freight to further optimize COGS, minimizing touch points across our network. All in, we expect a stronger rate of adjusted EPS growth in the second half of the year. Consistent with our ROIC focus, we plan to divest our JV in Mexico. And this is expected to impact international sales on an annualized basis by approximately $500 million, and will be immaterial from a profit standpoint. Turning to expenses, we remain on target to deliver positive operating leverage based on our sales professionals moving up the productivity curve, and a continuation of cost improvement from FY’24 across our supply chain and corporate expenses. For example, supply chain productivity was the strongest in September, critically important as expense improvements essentially flow through to the bottom line. As I mentioned before, there is multiple memory across the organization, and our year-to-go actions will help develop a stronger operating model that positions us to grow share profitably. We continue to expect strong conversion rates from adjusted EBITDA to operating and free cash flow for FY ‘25, and we plan to reward our shareholders by distributing essentially all our annual free cash flow with over $1 billion in dividends and $1 billion in share repurchases, which can flex up depending on M&A activity. We also expect to operate within our stated target of 2.5 times to 2.75 times net leverage for the year. The adjusted tax rate for FY ‘25 is expected to remain at approximately 25% driven by the implementation of the global minimum tax. We continue to evaluate additional actions to offset this impact. Our adjusted Q1 tax rate included timing benefits and planning initiatives. In closing, I'm confident in our FY ‘25 guidance and our ability to deliver on our long-term financial algorithm. We believe we are taking the right steps for the long-term benefit of the business and unlocking value that we award our shareholders. I look forward to our progress ahead. We are positioned to win. Thank you for your time today. I'll now pass the call back to Kevin.