Thanks, Toby, and thanks to everyone for joining today's call. We delivered first quarter revenue of $368.7 million, which was at the high end of our guidance range and adjusted EBITDA of $35.7 million, exceeding the high end of our guidance range. More importantly, the early proof points for the plan we outlined in February are landing as expected. Phase 1 carryover is flowing through, Phase 2 is on schedule, and we closed the divestiture of our Phoenix, Arizona operations in the quarter as planned. The operating environment remains broadly consistent with the demand backdrop we built our 2026 outlook around. As I said on our last call, we are not counting on end market recovery or tariff relief in 2026. We are focused on what we control, taking cost out, tightening the portfolio and building the foundation for operating leverage when growth returns. On cost, we are confident in delivering approximately $50 million of savings in 2026, $10 million of Phase 1 carryover and approximately $40 million of Phase 2 actions identified and in execution. The Board's Transformation committee is engaged with us and the work is on track. On the portfolio, the Phoenix divestiture, including the Upfit, UTV, Geiser and Shock Therapy businesses closed during the first quarter, consistent with the expectations we set on our last call and proceeds are dedicated to debt reduction. As I have said before, we will continue to evaluate every business we own against 3 criteria: alignment with our brands, synergy with our core competencies and an ability to deliver accretive margins and durable cash flows. And where a business does not meet these thresholds, we will act. With that, let me walk through our segments. PVG delivered net sales of $143.4 million in the first quarter, an increase of 17.4% year-over-year. This was a strong start to the year for this segment. Some of this growth reflects timing dynamics I'll cover next, though the underlying performance is consistent with the framework we laid out for the year. On the automotive side, our premium truck OE business performance was balanced by the timing of shipments against continued supply chain and production issues within our automotive OEMs. Keep in mind that, while demand continues to be more resilient at the high end of the market, the broader consumer is exercising restraint given ongoing macro pressures, including the unforeseen rise in gas prices. Our powersports business produced a solid quarter as OEM partners have largely overcome channel inventory imbalances. Our broad portfolio of customers and products should help insulate us from the OEM and tariff issues still impacting this market. We remain cautious in our near-term outlook for this business given continuing pressure on consumer discretionary spending. That said, powersports is structurally healthier than it was a year ago, and we believe we are well positioned as growth accelerates. AAG delivered net sales of $114.8 million, an increase of 2.6% year-over-year. Growth came from our upfitting product lines and solid aftermarket demand, partially offset by the Phoenix operations that exited the segment during the quarter. In PVD, our portfolio continues to evolve across OEM relationships and dealership expansion. As you recall, in the second half of last year, we announced a new program with an OEM partner to execute their performance upgrades. In Q1, we announced a similar strategic relationship with another major automotive OEM. This partnership model where our innovation tied to OEM-driven marketing and sales is a differentiated and defendable go-to-market strategy, which should drive long-term growth in upfitted trucks. We started shipping meaningful volume towards the end of Q1 as our supply chain normalized, and we are making good progress on that program in Q2. These are the kinds of programs that give us more predictable, sustainable revenue over time. We have significant operational supply chain, product, process and capacity work to be done in PVD. We have made strides in people and structure in Q1, which should enable many of the other work streams to drive top and bottom line improvements towards the end of this year. One final note. In the actions we have taken so far, we have reorganized sales forces internally and externally and refocused our efforts on dealership expansion, which is a critical long-term growth driver. In the last 60 days, we have added over 135 new dealers, and we are averaging over 60 new dealers a month as we go forward. Our aftermarket components business held up well in the quarter. Categories like custom wheelhouse, RideTech and Sport Truck continued to show consistent demand and delivered on or above expectations in the quarter, which is a proof point for resilient aftermarket demand where higher interest rates and elevated gas prices are weighing on consumers more broadly. When consumers can't afford to buy new trucks, they tend to invest in the trucks they already have, and this value-seeking behavior plays to our portfolio. Our product is hitting the right consumer at the right price point, and our channel strategy is helping us stay visible to this consumer as they are making purchase decisions. AAG margins were down year-over-year due to a combination of factors. The biggest drivers are volume, mix and operational challenges in upfit, as mentioned earlier. The volume and mix issue is directly related to the industry-wide aluminum supply disruption affecting Ford's production, which has constrained availability of the F-150 Lariat and XLT platforms, a predominant upfit chassis across several of our product lines. The Q1 and Q2 volume tied to that disruption is not expected to be recovered in 2026. However, we do believe back half volumes remain intact. The impact extends into our second quarter and is reflected in the outlook Dennis will walk through. Margins were also pressured by the delayed deliveries of finished vehicles and OEM outfit program I just mentioned, where shipments were weighted toward the end of Q1. And finally, by the dilutive impact of 2 months of Phoenix operations within the segment before the divestiture closed. SSG delivered net sales of $110.5 million, a decrease of 8.7% year-over-year. This performance is consistent with what we flagged in our last call. We knew Q1 would be a tough comp for SSG, particularly in bike, given the strength we saw in the first half of the prior year as the industry pulled forward orders in 2025. The bike environment feels much like last year. Channel inventory has improved but remains volatile and demand signals remain muted as consumers stay cautious. The good news is that we continue to make progress on new customer relationships and product expansion, particularly in categories like e-bikes where we see long-term opportunity. The changing landscape in OEMs who are winning and losing is both a challenge and an opportunity for POX. We are establishing and winning new relationships and the growth we are seeing from these OEMs is a stabilizing force in our business where the rest of the industry is challenged. We would expect bike to revert to seasonal norms and improve sequentially in Q2, though we are working through a temporary disruption tied to challenges in the Middle East affecting some of our suppliers and customers. The financial impact of that disruption is largely confined to Q2, and we expect the associated volume to flow through Q3 as conditions normalize. As I said on our last call, we are not chasing revenue here. We have the financial strength to lead with our brands and the innovation pipeline with new products and customers to protect our margin structure while the industry works through its cycle. Turning to Marzocchi. Bat industry volumes have continued to trend softly, which supports a deliberate decision in alignment with our retail partners to shift our planned Q2 product launches into Q3. Softball continues to be a bright spot. Our new products are resonating, and we are picking up meaningful share in that category. Softball has become an increasingly important contributor within the broader Marzocchi business, and it's a place where we continue to see a runway for growth. To provide perspective, our softball business has grown over 500% since 2024, which supports our innovation investments over the last 2 years. Stepping back across the segments, Q1 came in at the high end of our revenue guide and above the high end of our EBITDA guide. Our cost programs are tracking and the Phoenix divestiture is closed. This performance as well as the operating discipline that is central to our plans gives us the conviction to reaffirm our 2026 outlook today even as the macro environment remains challenging. With that, I will turn it over to Dennis to walk through our financial details.