Thanks, Jared. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us on today's call. In the third quarter, we exceeded our expectations on both the top and bottom line. Revenue grew approximately 7%, in line with our long-term target of mid- to high single-digit growth and was again driven by our two largest brands, Merrell and Saucony. Healthy revenue growth, coupled with another quarter of record gross margin and strong execution, delivered adjusted earnings per share of $0.36. Adjusted EPS grew at more than triple the rate of top line growth as we continue to prudently manage the business, balancing needed an important investment into the business while expanding profitability. Our strategy and disciplined execution continues to deliver solid results, and our team remains focused on executing our brand-building model with distinction, centered squarely on building awesome products, telling amazing stories and driving the business. As I reflect on where our portfolio is today and where we need to go tomorrow, it's clear our brands are at three different stages of development. First, Merrell and Saucony are moving at pace, taking market share and generating consistent revenue growth around the world. Our aim here is to continue to thoughtfully manage these brands to sustainably scale them to their fullest potential. We've made real progress in elevating design and innovation within their product pipeline as well as in strengthening their brand positioning through impactful marketing activations. For 2025, these two brands are expected to represent nearly 2/3 of the company's total revenue and record mid-teens year-over-year growth combined. Second, we believe Sweaty Betty has begun to turn the corner, the result of a lot of hard work in developing a new strategy and beginning to execute it over the past 6 months. The brand has delivered on the milestones that we believe are critical at this point in its evolution, which started with margin expansion and has transitioned to sequential improvement of year-over-year revenue trends. And finally, the Wolverine brand and our Work Group have not made the progress we anticipated. While I'm disappointed in our performance here, I believe we have a firm handle on the work that's necessary to get this business back on track. And importantly, we have new leadership in place. As of Monday, following a thorough search process, I'm pleased to announce Justin Cupps as our new Work Group President. Justin is a veteran leader with deep experience across a host of great footwear, apparel and accessory brands. He's a strong addition to our leadership team. And for some context, Work Group revenue represents less than 1/4 of the company's consolidated revenue and is now expected to finish the year down high single digits compared to 2024. In aggregate, I'm encouraged by the progress we've made and continue to make as a company. This year, we've elevated our teams and talent by adding excellent leadership like Justin, as well as new product design, merchandising, marketing and sales talent across our brands. We've improved our processes, including our integrated business planning approach for more efficient demand and inventory management. We successfully completed the integration of Sweaty Betty's tools and processes into the company's ecosystem, advanced the adoption and use of AI across the business and develop plans to further elevate and modernize our e-commerce tools and platform next year. We've developed new muscles to drive impact in the global marketplace with our key city strategy, and we fostered a new culture centered around growth and winning together. In addition to the above, we expect to deliver solid financial results for the year. The midpoint of our guidance reflects revenue growth of approximately 6%, an increase in adjusted earnings per share of approximately 50% compared to 2024. Before I turn the call over to Taryn Miller to provide greater detail on our third quarter results and outlook for the year, I'd like to share some additional insights on our brands and their continued progress. I'll start with Saucony, which grew 27% in the third quarter. Saucony is uniquely positioned as a disruptive challenger brand at the intersection of two of the fastest-growing categories in the market, performance and lifestyle running, and the brand continues to win in these highly competitive arenas. In the third quarter, Saucony grew performance run revenue by strong double digits globally compared to last year and again took market share in the important U.S. run specialty channel, powered in part by the brand's core 4 franchises, the Ride, Guide, Hurricane and Triumph, which target its movemaker consumer. While the brand successfully tapped into this broader market opportunity, it continues to maintain a strong focus on pinnacle innovation for elite runners with its Endorphin franchise. The collection includes the Endorphin Speed for serious training, the Endorphin Pro for race day and the Endorphin Elite super shoe for ultimate performance. In 2026, the brand plan to introduce the all-new Endorphin Azura, a premium non-plated trainer, targeting a larger consumer segment and growing opportunity within the market. In addition to further elevating franchises within the core 4 with innovation incubated within the aforementioned Endorphin series. On the lifestyle side, Saucony drove strong revenue growth globally and took significant market share here in the U.S. as we continue to focus on prudently growing this segment of the business around the world. The brand's deep product archive enables it to authentically capitalize on a variety of different trends. So ProGrid Omni 9 and Ride Millennium, two of the brand's retro tech silhouettes, again drove significant growth in Q3. While classics like the Jazz Original and Shadow 5000 are encouragingly beginning to spark interest for 2026 with influential Tier 0 and Tier 1 retailers. Saucony continues to fuel brand heat with culturally relevant collabs, releasing new drops over the past few months, including 3sixteen, Keith Haring, Jae Tips and Engineered Garments. Saucony collaborated with METAGIRL on a release last quarter as well, which successfully lead in the brand's significant opportunity with women, the beginning of a deeper anticipated partnership with the influential designer going forward. In addition, the brand plans on dropping its first collaboration with prominent creator Westside Gunn in December with an expanded relationship and more drops expected next year. Saucony's brand is strong around the world, and we continue to invest in the brand in the last quarter, in part through our key city strategy. Saucony continued to leverage Tokyo in the Asia Pacific region with the flagship store opened in Harajuku earlier this year and is on track to open a host of new stores more broadly in China with our partner there. We expect that APAC will be the fastest-growing region in the world for the brand this year. In Europe, Saucony took over Central London as the title sponsor of the London 10K in July, as I detailed on our last call, and followed this up with the sponsorship of the Shoreditch 10K in September, bookends to a powerful quarter for the brand in London and more broadly in the EMEA region, which as a whole is on track to deliver strong double-digit revenue growth this year with momentum heading into 2026. Looking ahead, Saucony plans to expand its key city strategy to Paris, sponsoring the Eifel Tower 10K next month and opening our next pioneer store there in 2026. Brand interest continues to ramp up globally and affinity for the brand continues to increase with runners and more specifically, the younger consumer. While we continue to have success here in our home market, I'm equally excited about the global potential of the brand. Saucony's positioning within the fast-growing run lifestyle market is unique and a compelling combination of heritage and authenticity, coupled with best-in-class innovation and developing cultural relevance and the brand is setting the pace. 2025 is proving to be a great year for Saucony, which is on track to deliver all-time record revenue and profit as a brand. Moving to Merrell, which grew revenue 5% in the third quarter, driving increases in most regions and in both the performance and lifestyle sides of this business. Merrell, the category leader in hike, remains focused on modernizing the trail as an authentic outdoor lifestyle brand with more athletic and more versatile product design and innovation. In the third quarter, the brand accelerated its long-running market share gains in its core Hike category in the U.S., having taken share in 11 of the last 12 quarters, a category which encouragingly again improved sequentially to flat year-over-year. The Moab Speed 2, which is becoming a force on the trail and the world's #1 hiker, the Moab 3, both continue to drive growth at U.S. retail. The Agility Peak 5 drove strong growth on the trail running side. Looking ahead to the next spring, Merrell plans to introduce the new Agility Peak 6, combining plush FloatPro foam cushioning with aggressive Vibram Megagrip traction. Merrell's lifestyle business grew strong double digits in the third quarter, driven by a strong ramp-up of its disruptive Wrapt Collection, along with steady growth from the iconic easy on, easy off Jungle Moc at U.S. retail. In 2026, we anticipate the brand's lifestyle product pipeline will take a meaningful step forward. We're introducing trend-right low-profile silhouettes with the Relay, modern iterations on the Jungle Moc, lifestyle materializations of the SpeedARC collection and a consistent flow of energy-enhancing collaborations. While we're further distancing ourselves from the competition hike, we know a significant global opportunity exists in outdoor-inspired footwear, apparel and accessories. In the third quarter, Merrell drove increases in brand interest in affinity, particularly with women, and the brand's key city strategy continues to fuel momentum for the brand around the world as it has done for Saucony. Merrell's urban hike guide (sic) [ Urban Hiking Guide ] activation, which included media events, collabs and influencers drove brand heat in Paris and contributed to another quarter of solid growth in broader EMEA. Turning to Sweaty Betty, which outpaced our expectations in the third quarter with revenue down 4% versus the prior year. The team is aligned around a clear strategy and is executing with a high level of conviction and increased confidence as we reinvigorate Sweaty Betty as one of the original activewear brands focused on empowering women through fitness and beyond. Our efforts started with reestablishing Sweaty Betty's premium brand positioning, which underpins our entire strategy. Bold and distinctive storytelling behind the Wear the Damn Shorts campaign in the second quarter and the Weather Whatever campaign last quarter have continued to reinforce the brand's uniquely Sweaty Betty female-focused positioning. As a result, brand awareness and affinity continued to increase in the quarter with noteworthy gains among younger consumers and more premium buyers. At the same time, gross margins expanded once again as the brand continues strengthen both its product pipeline and positioning in the marketplace. Along with the improved business results, we're also making meaningful progress against the three pillars of our brand's new strategy. First, we are delivering growth within our DTC business in Sweaty Betty's home market with both e-commerce and stores growing in the third quarter. We started to elevate the brand's product line by introducing more newness, enabling a fresher offering with trend-right design and more thoughtful assortments, diversifying the brand's leadership in bottoms and expanding outerwear. This effort has produced some encouraging results with pants and outerwear both up very strong double digits across our DTC business in the quarter. Within our digital channels, we remain focused on enhancing the consumer experience. One example is the new Sweaty Betty app, which we launched last quarter, where consumers are converting at a higher rate and spending more per transaction. In brick-and-mortar, we've taken action over the past few months to further optimize our retail footprint, relocating 3 stores, opening 1 new store and closing a store. The new locations are performing well, and before the year is done, we plan to open 5 more new stores. Second, we're making early progress in expanding distribution in certain key markets. We launched the brand's new partnership in China and opened a pop-up store in Shanghai, opened a second store with our partner in New