Thank you, Tim and good morning, everyone. For my remarks today, I will address four key topic areas. First, I'll review the highlights of our financial performance for the first quarter. Second, the continued strength of our balance sheet, including our leverage and liquidity positions; third, I will reiterate our capital allocation priorities. And finally, I'll provide an update on our full year 2023 guidance. As a reminder, our consolidated results include both the results of our upstream and CCS businesses as further covered in our 10-Q filed last night. Where appropriate, I will highlight these impacts in my discussion of the financials. During the quarter, we produced 63,600 barrels of oil equivalent per day including production from the EnVen acquisition from the mid-February closing date. Pricing from our production in the quarter reflected the general softening in the commodity markets with realizations of over $70 per barrel of oil, NGLs at approximately 31% of our realized oil price and over $2.80 per Mcf on natural gas production. This resulted in total revenue of $323 million. Net income for the quarter was approximately $90 million or $0.84 per diluted share. Net income was impacted by a tax benefit during the quarter of approximately $46.5 million, primarily related to the partial reversal in our valuation allowance which we hold against our deferred tax asset. Our adjusted net loss during the quarter was approximately $1.3 million or $0.01 per diluted share. During the first quarter, we generated adjusted EBITDA of $203 million or $215 million before the cash impact of hedge settlements. These were inclusive of approximately $6 million of expenses related to TLCS. On a per barrel of oil equivalent basis, this translated to adjusted EBITDA margins of approximately $35 per barrel of oil equivalent and adjusted EBITDA margins excluding realized hedge losses of approximately $38 per barrel of oil equivalent. This represents 65% and 67% margins respectively. Upstream capital expenditures for the quarter were $190 million including plugging and abandonment capital. This is lower than we anticipated for the quarter due to certain lower-than-expected drilling costs and the delay of an outside operated well, which spud in the second quarter rather than the first. Additionally, CCS spend of approximately $21 million was lower than expected during the quarter. As we expected with only half quarter of EnVen production combined with a high activity capital quarter, free cash flow before working capital was slightly negative at $46 million inclusive of total CCS spend of $27 million. Turning to the balance sheet. At the end of the first quarter, net debt stood at $1.045 billion. This includes $258 million of notes that we assumed with the closing of the EnVen transaction. Additionally, our RBL balance stood at $165 million outstanding on March 31, which included both the closing consideration for EnVen, as well as the costs from our recently announced share repurchase program. As of March 31, our leverage stood at approximately 0.9 times, inclusive of our pre-closing EBITDA contribution from EnVen. Liquidity at quarter end remained very high at approximately $805 million, with $800 million available under our revolving credit facility. As previously announced, our bank commitments increased by 20% to $965 million upon the closing of the EnVen acquisition in February. We are currently undergoing our semiannual borrowing base redetermination process and expect results from this process in the second quarter. Turning to our capital allocation framework, which we announced in February. We think of it in two ways: a systematic approach and an opportunistic approach. Systematically, we will continue to focus near-term on reducing leverage, most likely through paydown of the RBL, as the primary use of our free cash flow until deleveraging targets are met. However, opportunistically, we are focused on supporting our shares when they are under undue selling pressure, such as we saw recently when the banking system came under pressure. As such in March, we announced a $100 million stock repurchase program and we repurchased approximately $27 million in the first quarter or 1.9 million shares equating to roughly 1.5% of total shares outstanding. We will continue to monitor the markets and be opportunistic when it comes to share repurchases. Our share repurchase program provides an impactful opportunity to return capital to shareholders and we will continue to balance our priorities of investing in catalysts, remaining mindful of our credit quality and providing returns of capital to shareholders. Turning to our financial guidance for the full year 2023. As previously outlined in our earnings release and as Tim discussed from an operational perspective, we now expect annual production to be between 66,000 and 71,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. We have taken a measure twice cut once approach to this range. While production results for January and February of 2023 were in line with original expectations for both Talos and EnVen beginning late in the quarter several new and existing wells began to perform below original expectations. While the company will continue to evaluate ways to restore production levels after a rigorous review we determined that the revised range best captures current expectations for 2023 production. For the balance of the year, we expect the second and fourth quarters to be similar to one another with the third quarter most heavily impacted by weather-related downtime risk. Apart from these revisions, all other previously guided expense categories remained unchanged from prior guidance. In fact, many of these categories are tracking at the lower half of the guidance ranges and we still expect to be free cash flow before working capital generative for the full year 2023. We remain excited about the overall growth trajectory of the business as we look forward to reaching or exceeding 80,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day early next year when two recent discoveries are turned online. Meanwhile, even with the debt assumption and cash component required to close the EnVen transaction, our credit position remains strong and near its all-time best. Lastly, we continue to be excited about the investment opportunities in both our upstream and CCS businesses for 2023 and beyond and we believe these investments will deliver and accelerate long-term value to Talos' shareholders. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Tim.