Thanks, Elizabeth, and thank you for joining us today. I'd like to start with a quick look at our second quarter highlights on Slide three. Our system-wide sales increased 11% to $826 million, and our same-store sales growth for the quarter was 5.8%. Total net sales increased 11% to $403 million when adjusted for the impact of refranchising. Adjusted EBITDA increased 6%, also including the impact of refranchising. Our system-wide store count is now 2,078, up 8% over the prior year. And we announced this morning that Kevin Willis would be joining our team as CFO effective May 19. Before I provide an update on our strategic priorities, I want to cover a couple of topics that are top of mind given the current market environment. First, on slide four, I want to provide our current assessment on tariffs. With what we know today, we expect the impact to be minimal. We put together a cross-functional team more than six months ago to collaborate with our suppliers. Our largest product cost is finished lubricants, which are primarily composed of base oils and additives. It's our understanding that base oils remain exempt from tariffs as of now. And we expect most additives to remain exempt from tariffs as well. The next largest supply category is ancillary products like filters and wipers. We've worked with our suppliers to shift the majority of our supply from China to Vietnam, and we continue to review alternate sources to optimize our flexibility. When we look at our inventory on hand and factor in the ninety-day pause on the reciprocal tariffs, we do not expect a significant change in cost for fiscal year 2025. And we continue to look at other areas of spend to evaluate any tariff impact. As it relates to construction materials and equipment for our store additions, we expect a single-digit percentage increase on new store capital cost. As it relates to other costs like store maintenance and technology, we expect a low single-digit increase as well. In total, for fiscal year 2025, we expect an operating cost impact of less than $4 million system-wide. This includes the impact on franchisees but excludes any additional mitigating actions. And we estimate the annualized impact to be about a one to 2% increase to our cost of sales, which we will mitigate through cost reduction efforts, alternative supply strategies, or pricing pass-through to customers. As a result, we feel very well positioned to navigate the changes as they come. The other topic is around the macro uncertainty in the state of the consumer. It's important to remember that we are a strong business in a very resilient industry with a lot of growth potential. Our industry has strong fundamentals and resilient long-term demand drivers. Customers are continuing to drive more, keep their vehicles longer, and seek convenience. And we have not seen evidence of deferral of service or trade down from our customers. We are well positioned within the industry to provide customers quick, easy, trusted service necessary to maintain their vehicles. Our powerful brand, superior service experience, strong franchise partnerships, and robust customer data differentiate us from our competitors and position us to meet customer needs for preventative vehicle maintenance. As we look at the total available market, there is considerable opportunity for growth, considering we currently only have about 5% of the overall market share related to the do-it-for-me oil changes. Now let me provide an update on some of our strategic priorities. This quarter, we saw growth in our business across all quartiles of household income and growth in NOCR across all store quartiles. We had healthy transaction growth across our business, including for our mature store base. Our marketing sophistication is a key competitive advantage that helps us drive strong demand. We recently completed the transition of our customer and marketing database into the cloud, which will enable us to deliver increased efficiency and personalization of our marketing spend. And we had a great launch of university athletic partnerships in two company markets of Ohio and Tennessee during March Madness, targeted towards new customer acquisition. We also continue to make progress on talent management, with rolling twelve-month attrition rates remaining low and wage inflation moderating. Enhance capabilities, we successfully implemented the first phase of our HRIS workday. This new platform enables further development of our labor management capabilities and improves our ability to engage directly with our over 11,000 team members. As we approach the summer drive season, our team is staffed and ready to deliver an outstanding customer experience. Given about 80% of the customers we serve are customers we served before, delivering a consistent and high experience is fundamental to our growth. We are pleased to report that based on over a million surveys in the past twelve months, our customers have increased their rating of Valvoline Inc. and Steno's change to 4.7 out of five stars. I want to thank our company and franchise store teams for the work they do every day to deliver best-in-class service to our guests. On accelerating network growth, this quarter, we added another 33 net new store additions, bringing our year-to-date total to 68. Our pipeline for the year is more back-half loaded than we would have liked. However, when we look at stores already in construction and the acquisition pipeline for both company and franchisees, we have confidence in our ability to deliver store additions well within our guidance range. During the quarter, we announced that we would be adding 200 additional stores through the acquisition of Breeze Auto Care. In early April, we received a second request from the FTC. We remain excited about this opportunity and we continue to work to gain approval to close the transaction. While we do not have complete control over the timeline, we hope we can close the transaction in the second half of fiscal 2025. Before I wrap up my comments on accelerating network growth, I want to give an update on what we're seeing in the markets that we refranchised on Slide seven. You'll recall during Q4 of last year and Q1 of this year, we completed three refranchising transactions, which included bringing on a new franchise partner in our Central and West Texas market. These transactions deliver shareholder value when the sum of the transaction price combined with the present value of the future cash flow streams from existing and committed store growth represents a higher overall EBITDA multiple than our current trading. The key factor is delivering on the committed store growth. So I'd like to provide an update on that. While we were just a few months in, we're already seeing the new store grow from these pre-franchise markets. And we expect to have double-digit additions by the end of the year. We also have two new franchise partners that joined the system in the last two years and have now ramped their pipeline from one store every couple of years to already opening four new stores this year. And their pipeline growth is exciting. I'm pleased with the momentum that we have been able to create with our franchise partners to accelerate network growth. While these refranchising transactions will create long-term shareholder value, they do create near-term comparison challenges. So Mary will provide additional information on how these transactions impact our financial comparisons as she reviews the results. But before I turn it over to Mary to take us through our financial results in more detail, I'd like to thank her for her dedicated service to Valvoline Inc. since the company's IPO in 2016. I want to personally thank her for her leadership and the many ways she supported me as I joined the company and then stepped into the CEO role. While she'll be supporting the transition, we want to take this opportunity to wish her all the best in her much-deserved retirement. With that, I'll turn it over to Mary.