Thank you, Rick, and good morning, everyone. We were pleased to deliver net sales growth in the quarter and for the full year. At the same time, we drove productivity and net price benefits and continued to make progress in addressing elevated order backlogs and field inventories. Consolidated net sales for the quarter were $1.08 billion, up 9.4% from Q4 last year. Reported EPS was $0.87 per diluted share, up from $0.67 in the fourth quarter of last year. Adjusted EPS was $0.95 per diluted share, up 34% from $0.71 a year ago. For the full year, net sales of $4.58 billion were up from $4.55 billion last year. Reported EPS was $4.01 per diluted share. This compares to $3.13 last year, which included a non-cash impairment charge in our Professional segment. On an adjusted basis, full-year EPS was $4.17 per diluted share, down slightly from $4.21, a reflection of product mix with growth weighted to our Residential segment. Now to the segment results. Professional segment net sales for the fourth quarter were $913.9 million, up 10.3% year-over-year. This increase was primarily driven by higher shipments of golf and grounds products and underground construction equipment, as we address the sustained demand that has kept order backlog elevated and net price realizations. This was partially offset by lower shipments of compact utility loaders as expected, given that field inventories have replenished and lower shipments of snow and ice management products also as expected, given elevated field levels heading into the season. For the full year, Professional segment net sales decreased 3.2% to $3.56 billion and comprised 78% of total company net sales. Professional segment earnings for the fourth quarter were $169.7 million on a reported basis, up from $124.5 million last year. When expressed as a percentage of net sales, earnings for the segment were 18.6%, up from 15%. The positive change in profitability was primarily due to productivity improvements, net sales leverage, net price realization, and product mix. This was partially offset by higher material and manufacturing costs. For the full year, Professional segment earnings were $638.9 million, up from $509.1 million in fiscal 2023. As a percentage of net sales, segment earnings were 18%, up from 13.9% last year. Residential segment net sales for the fourth quarter were $155.1 million, up 4.5% compared to last year. Growth in the quarter was primarily driven by higher shipments of lawn care products to our mass channel, partially offset by lower shipments of snow products and higher sales promotions. For the full year, residential segment net sales were $998.3 million, up 16.9% from $854.2 million in fiscal 2023, and comprised 22% of total company net sales. The Residential segment reported a loss of $13.8 million compared to a $4.5 million profit last year. The year-over-year decrease was largely due to higher material and freight costs, higher warranty and marketing expense and product mix. This was partially offset by productivity improvements. As we expected, we recognized an outsized impact of higher material and freight costs in the quarter. This was due to the timing of production and shipments throughout the year. The variability was more pronounced than typical given the unique circumstances. We prioritized being a good supplier, while at the same time adjusting to rapidly changing demand dynamics. For the full year, Residential segment earnings were $78.4 million, up from $68.9 million. As a percentage of net sales, segment earnings were 7.9% compared to 8.1% last year. This was largely a reflection of product mix within the segment this year with the reduction in snow shipments and the weighting towards entry-level zero turn mowers. Turning to our operating results for the total company; our reported and adjusted gross margin were 32.4% and 32.3%, respectively, for the quarter. This compares to 33.5% and 33.6% respectively in the same period last year. The decrease was primarily due to higher material, freight, and manufacturing costs. This was partially offset by productivity improvements. For the full year, reported and adjusted gross margin were 33.8% and 33.9% respectively. This compares to 34.6% and 34.7% in fiscal 2023. The change was primarily driven by higher material and manufacturing costs and product mix. This was partially offset by productivity improvements. SG&A expense as a percentage of net sales for the quarter improved to 22.3% from 23.9% a year ago. The improvement was primarily driven by net sales leverage, lower incentive compensation, and lower marketing costs. This was partially offset by higher warranty expense. For the full year, SG&A expense as a percentage of net sales was 22.2% compared to 21.8% last year. Operating earnings as a percentage of net sales for the quarter were 10.1%, up from 9.6% in the same period last year. On an adjusted basis, operating earnings as a percentage of net sales were 10.9%, an 80 basis point improvement from the fourth quarter a year ago. For the full year, operating earnings as a percentage of net sales were 11.6%, and on an adjusted basis were 12.2%. These both compared to 9.5% and 12.9% on a reported and adjusted basis respectively in fiscal 2023. Interest expense for the quarter was $14.5 million, down from $14.9 million last year. The decrease was primarily due to lower average outstanding borrowings and lower average interest rates. Interest expense for the full year was $61.9 million, up $3.2 million. The year-over-year increase was primarily due to higher average interest rates, partially offset by lower average outstanding borrowings. The reported and adjusted effective tax rates for the fourth quarter were 17.7% and 16.9%, respectively. These compare with 19.1% and 19.3% a year ago. The decreases were primarily due to a more favorable geographic mix of earnings this year. For the full year, the reported effective tax rate was 18.3% compared to 17.7% in fiscal 2023. The increase was primarily due to the impact of non-cash impairment charges in the prior year and lower tax benefits recorded as excess tax deductions for stock compensation in the current year. This was partially offset by a more favorable geographic mix of earnings this year. The adjusted effective tax rate for the full year was 18.8% compared to 20.4% a year ago. The year-over-year improvement was largely due to a more favorable geographic mix of earnings. Turning to our balance sheet. Accounts receivable were $459.7 million, up 12.8% from a year ago, primarily driven by increased shipments to our mass channel as well as payment terms to that channel. This increase was expected given the initial year of our strategic partnership with Lowe's. Inventory at the end of Q4 was $1.04 billion, down 4.5% compared to last year and slightly lower sequentially from the third quarter. The year-over-year decrease was driven by reductions in both finished goods and work in process, primarily driven by lower balances related to lawn care products. This was partially offset by higher levels of compact utility loaders as expected. Accounts payable were $452.7 million, up 5.3% from last year, primarily driven by the timing of material purchases. Full-year free cash flow was significantly higher year-over-year at $471 million. This reflects a conversion ratio of 112% of reported net earnings, much improved from 50% in the prior year. Importantly, our balance sheet remains strong and provides financial flexibility. Our leverage ratio is within our stated target of 1 to 2 times on a gross basis, and we continue to benefit from our investment-grade credit ratings. During the quarter, we refinanced our $600 million revolving credit facility and a $270 million term loan that were both set to expire in October of 2026. We replaced those facilities with a $900 million revolver and a $200 million term loan. The increased revolver size is a reflection of the substantial growth in our company, since the last upsize in 2018, which was prior to the Charles Machine Works acquisition. This larger revolver also provides a mechanism to reduce future refinancing risk and easily accommodate modestly-sized acquisitions. Our disciplined approach to capital allocation remains unchanged with our first priority to make strategic investments in our business to drive long-term profitable growth, both organically and through acquisitions. We invested about $100 million in capital expenditures during fiscal 2024, and expect to invest another $100 million in fiscal 2025. Our next priority is to return capital to shareholders, both through our regular dividend and through share repurchases. We increased our dividend $0.08 per share or 6% for fiscal 2024, and our Board just approved another 6% increase for the first quarter of fiscal 2025. This consistent increase in our regular dividend payout over time demonstrates the conviction we have in our strong and sustainable future cash flows. With respect to share repurchases, we continue to fund buybacks with excess free cash flow while maintaining our leverage goals. We invested nearly $250 million in fiscal 2024 to repurchase about 2.8 million shares, while also paying off our outstanding revolver borrowings and $70 million of term loan. We plan to continue repurchasing shares in fiscal 2025, a reflection of our strong conviction in future profitable growth opportunities. In addition to the dividend increase, our Board authorized an additional 4 million shares under our repurchase program, putting the total authorization at just over 8 million shares heading into the new fiscal year. Before I provide details on our fiscal 2025 outlook, I want to take a few moments to address three topics that have been top of mind for investors. First, order backlog, which is our open order book at a point in time. We ended the year with a backlog of about $1.2 billion. This has improved from about $2 billion a year ago, but still elevated over what we would consider a normal range. The elevation is attributable to two areas of our business, underground construction and golf and grounds. We continue to expect backlog will be close to normal by the end of fiscal 2025. Importantly, we expect the sustained strength in these businesses will help avoid a significant gap as demand and supply normalize. We also expect field inventories of our lawn care and snow products to normalize, which should provide some offset. Second, field inventory. Field levels remain higher than ideal for our lawn care and snow businesses and much lower than ideal for underground construction equipment. For lawn care products, we still have a little work to get back to normal, similar to where we were at the end of last quarter. Importantly, we made significant progress in reducing dealer-filled inventories of lawn care products during fiscal 2024, driven by lower shipments, coupled with retail sales growth that outpaced industry averages. This outperformance in sell-through demonstrates the strength of our brands and market share and our attractive positioning as homeowner markets eventually rebalance. We expect to enter the upcoming turf season as well as the snow pre-season in the second half of fiscal 2025 in a much better field position compared to fiscal 2024. Third, I would like to comment on inventory financing. In our industry, inventory floor plan financing programs are the standard. From our dealer or distributor perspective, the financing operates the same, whether it is through Red Iron or another financial institution. From our perspective, the JV structure allows us to recoup a portion of the floor planning costs we pay as the OEM, which is a positive for us. In terms of Red Iron receivables, the balances move around seasonally as expected, given the retail flow also follows seasonal patterns. With this, our Red Iron DSO ticked up slightly sequentially from Q3 as is typical given the normal flow. However, compared to the fourth quarter of last year, we saw a slight improvement after adjusting for the onboarding of new acquisition balances. Importantly, our network of dealers and distributors remains financially sound. One data point to consider is the amount of repurchases we were required to make during fiscal 2024, which was immaterial as usual given the strength of our channel and brands. Now moving to our fiscal 2025 outlook. With the backdrop I just provided and based on our current visibility, we expect total company net sales growth in a range of zero to 1% for the full year. This assumes continued strong demand and stable supply for our businesses with elevated backlog, a continuation of the macro caution we have seen in markets connected to homeowners and weather patterns aligned with historical averages. It also considers the additional adjustments needed to normalize field levels of lawn care and snow products. For the Professional segment, we expect full-year net sales to be up low single digits. For the Residential segment, we expect net sales to be down high-single digits, which considers the continued rebalancing of our mass partners as well as the full-year impact of last year's Pope divestitures. Looking at profitability, for the full year, we expect improvement in both adjusted gross margin and adjusted operating earnings as a percentage of net sales. We also expect both the Residential and Professional segment earnings margins to be higher than last year. With this backdrop, we anticipate full-year adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $4.25 to $4.40. Additionally, for the full year, we expect depreciation and amortization of about $125 million to $135 million, interest expense of about $54 million, an adjusted effective tax rate of about 20%, and a free cash flow conversion rate of about 100% of reported net income. Turning to the first quarter of fiscal 2025, we anticipate total company net sales to be similar year-over-year. We expect Professional segment net sales to be up low single digits and residential net sales to be down mid-single digits compared to the same period last year. Looking at profitability, for the first quarter, we expect total company adjusted operating margin to be slightly lower year-over-year. We expect the Professional segment earnings margin to be similar to slightly higher than the same period last year and the Residential segment earnings margin to be slightly lower. Overall, we expect our first quarter fiscal 2025 adjusted diluted EPS to be slightly lower year-over-year. We continue to build our business for long-term profitable growth and are excited about the momentum we are seeing with AMP. As our current Drive for Five employee initiative sunsets, we are introducing our next initiative called Amp It Up. This new initiative will align and incent all employees to drive productivity and profitability with a goal to achieve a total company adjusted operating earnings margin of at least 14% by the full-year fiscal 2026. We are confident in our ability to drive productivity gains and profitability improvement across the enterprise. With that, I'll turn the call back to Rick.