Thanks, Lucian, and good morning, everyone. I'm excited to be here on my first call as CFO and for the opportunity to partner with Lucian and the rest of the Timken team to accelerate value creation for our stakeholders. For the financial review, I'm going to start on Slide 6 of the materials with a summary of third quarter results. Overall, revenue for the quarter was $1.16 billion, which is up 2.7% from last year. Adjusted EBITDA margins came in at 17.4%, a 50 basis point increase. And adjusted earnings per share for the quarter was $1.37, up 11% from last year. Turning to Slide 7. Let's take a closer look at our third quarter sales. Organically, sales were up 0.6% from last year. The increase was driven by higher pricing across both segments and modest volume growth in Engineered Bearings, which more than offset lower demand in the Industrial Motion segment. Looking at the rest of the revenue walk, the CGI acquisition and foreign currency translation each contributed approximately 1% of growth to the top line. On the right, you can see third quarter performance in terms of organic growth by region. This excludes both currency and acquisitions. Let me give you some color on each region. In the Americas, our largest region, we were down 1%, with growth in North America slightly more than offset by lower revenue in Latin America. By sector, revenue was higher in general industrial and aerospace, while we had lower shipments in the rail, renewable energy and on-highway markets. In Asia Pacific, we were up 2% from last year, led by growth in China with a significant increase again in wind energy shipments. India was up slightly in the quarter, while the rest of the region was lower. And finally, we were up 2% in EMEA, led by growth across the off-highway, rail and heavy industry sectors, partially offset by lower on-highway revenue. Note that this is the first time the region posted growth in more than 2 years, which is great to see. Turning to Slide 8. Adjusted EBITDA was $202 million or 17.4% of sales in the third quarter compared to $190 million or 16.9% of sales last year. We achieved nearly 40% incremental margins in the quarter, driven by improved operating performance more than offsetting the dilutive impact of tariffs. Looking at the year-over-year change in adjusted EBITDA dollars, you can see the increase was driven collectively by several factors, which more than offset the impact of lower volume and incremental gross tariff costs. Let me comment a little further on the different drivers. On price/mix, pricing was positive in the quarter, while mix was negative. Pricing was also up sequentially from the second quarter as we continue to put through pricing actions to mitigate the impact from tariffs. And as you can see on the slide, tariffs were a $20 million headwind versus last year and costs were also higher sequentially. Looking at material and logistics, costs were notably lower versus last year, driven mostly by savings tactics in the Engineered Bearings segment. Moving to the SG&A other line. Expenses were down from last year, driven by cost reduction initiatives and lower accruals for bad debt. Currency added $4 million to adjusted EBITDA, while our CGI acquisition contributed $3 million and was accretive to company margins again in the third quarter. Keep in mind that CGI was included in the acquisitions line for only about 2 months this quarter as we passed the 1-year ownership mark in early September. Now let's move to our business segment results, starting with Engineered Bearings on Slide 9. Engineered Bearings sales were $766 million in the quarter, up 3.4% from last year. Organically, sales were up 2.7%, driven by higher pricing and higher volumes with growth across all geographic regions during the quarter. Among market sectors, renewable energy, aerospace and general industrial achieved the strongest gains versus last year. We also posted growth in off-highway and rail, while auto truck declined from last year. Engineered Bearings adjusted EBITDA was $144 million or 18.8% of sales in the third quarter compared to $138 million or 18.7% of sales last year. Margins came in above expectations as higher-than-anticipated sales volumes and strong operating performance by our team more than offset the unfavorable margin impact from tariffs. And note that currency was a headwind to margins in the quarter, and excluding FX, organic incremental margins were nearly 40%. Now let's turn to Industrial Motion on Slide 10. Industrial Motion sales were $391 million in the quarter, up 1.3% from last year. The CGI acquisition contributed 2.9% to the top line, while currency translation was a benefit of 1.9%. Organically, sales declined 3.5% as lower demand was partially offset by higher pricing. The organic volume decline was mostly driven by lower solar demand and a decrease in services revenue. Our services business was down against a tough comp last year, and we continue to see some customers delaying maintenance spend. And as expected, the belts and chain platform was down from last year as it continues to be impacted by lower agriculture demand in North America. On the positive side, our couplings platform was up in the quarter, while lubrication systems and Linear Motion were relatively flat. Industrial Motion adjusted EBITDA was $75 million or 19% of sales in the third quarter compared to $74 million or 19.2% of sales last year. The slight decline in segment margins primarily reflects the impact of lower volume and incremental gross tariff costs, offset by favorable pricing, lower SG&A expense and the benefit of the CGI acquisition to margins in the quarter. Moving to Slide 11. You can see that we generated operating cash flow of $201 million in the third quarter. And after CapEx of $37 million, free cash flow was $164 million, up significantly from last year, and we expect to generate more than $100 million of free cash flow in the fourth quarter. Looking at the balance sheet, we ended the third quarter with net debt to adjusted EBITDA at 2.1x, which is near the middle of our targeted range. Note that we strengthened the balance sheet from last quarter as we reduced net debt by $115 million, and you can see that our net leverage improved compared to June 30. Now let's turn to the updated outlook for full year 2025 with a summary on Slide 13. Overall, we are reaffirming the midpoint of our earnings guidance range of $5.25 as the better-than-expected third quarter results are offsetting an incremental $0.05 per share headwind from tariffs and a lower outlook for the fourth quarter. With respect to net sales, we raised the full year outlook by 50 basis points versus the midpoint of the prior guide. Specifically, we are now planning for 2025 sales to be down approximately 0.75% in total at the midpoint. Organically, we expect sales to be down around 1.75%, which is slightly better than our prior guide, driven by the stronger-than-expected volumes in the third quarter. Currency is now expected to be slightly positive to the top line for the full year versus flat in the prior outlook, while there is no change to our M&A assumption. Now let me provide a little more color on the updated organic revenue outlook. The implied outlook for the fourth quarter is for a 2% year-over-year decline. Note that this factors in a greater-than-normal seasonal sequential decline. The evolving trade situation continues to weigh on industrial market activity, and we are planning for customers to be cautious through year-end. And recall that last year's fourth quarter benefited from a sizable military marine project, which is impacting the Industrial Motion segment organic sales comparison. Moving to margins. Our full year consolidated adjusted EBITDA margins are now expected to be in the low to mid-17% range. This implies that fourth quarter margins will be down around 100 basis points from last year, driven by higher corporate expense, a dilutive impact from tariffs and lower profitability in the Industrial Motion segment, driven by the absence of last year's favorable military marine project. With respect to cash flow, we're reaffirming our outlook to generate $375 million of free cash flow at the midpoint, which would be more than 130% conversion on GAAP net income. On Slide 14, we provide an updated view on our 2025 organic sales by market and sector. Relative to the prior guide, we increased the outlook for renewable energy, driven by higher wind shipments. Overall, the net change among all the market sectors you see in the chart supports the slightly improved full year organic sales outlook. Moving to Slide 15. Here, we provide an overview and update on the direct impact of tariffs on Timken. We covered most of this on previous earnings calls, so let me just hit the changes. We're currently estimating a full year net negative impact from tariffs of approximately $15 million or $0.15 per share. This is more of a headwind than our prior estimate of $10 million or $0.10 per share, driven by the increase in the tariff rate on India and the expansion of Section 232 tariffs. The situation continues to evolve, but we still expect that our mitigation tactics will enable us to recapture the margin in 2026. In summary, the company delivered better-than-expected third quarter results, and the team is focused on finishing the year strong. While still early, we are cautiously optimistic on the outlook as we head into next year based on some encouraging order trends in a few of our markets and considering how long our industrial markets have been down. Timken remains well positioned to leverage a recovery in market volumes into higher profitability, and we expect to benefit from the strategic priorities that Lucian highlighted. Let me turn it back over to Lucian for some final remarks before we open the line for questions. Lucian?